J. C. Loredo
University of Queensland
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Featured researches published by J. C. Loredo.
Nature Photonics | 2016
N. Somaschi; Valérian Giesz; L. De Santis; J. C. Loredo; M. P. Almeida; Gaston Hornecker; S. L. Portalupi; T. Grange; C. Antón; Justin Demory; Carmen Gomez; I. Sagnes; N. D. Lanzillotti-Kimura; A. Lemaître; Alexia Auffèves; Andrew White; L. Lanco; P. Senellart
A single photon with near-unity indistinguishability is generated from quantum dots in electrically controlled cavity structures. The cavity allows for efficient photon collection while application of an electrical bias cancels charge noise effects.
Physical Review Letters | 2017
J. C. Loredo; Matthew A. Broome; Paul Hilaire; O. Gazzano; I. Sagnes; A. Lemaître; M. P. Almeida; P. Senellart; Andrew White
A boson-sampling device is a quantum machine expected to perform tasks intractable for a classical computer, yet requiring minimal nonclassical resources as compared to full-scale quantum computers. Photonic implementations to date employed sources based on inefficient processes that only simulate heralded single-photon statistics when strongly reducing emission probabilities. Boson sampling with only single-photon input has thus never been realized. Here, we report on a boson-sampling device operated with a bright solid-state source of single-photon Fock states with high photon-number purity: the emission from an efficient and deterministic quantum dot-micropillar system is demultiplexed into three partially indistinguishable single photons, with a single-photon purity 1-g^{(2)}(0) of 0.990±0.001, interfering in a linear optics network. Our demultiplexed source is between 1 and 2 orders of magnitude more efficient than current heralded multiphoton sources based on spontaneous parametric down-conversion, allowing us to complete the boson-sampling experiment faster than previous equivalent implementations.
arXiv: Quantum Physics | 2016
J. C. Loredo; Nor A. Zakaria; N. Somaschi; C. Antón; Lorenzo de Santis; Valérian Giesz; T. Grange; Matthew A. Broome; O. Gazzano; G. Coppola; I. Sagnes; A. Lemaître; Alexia Auffèves; P. Senellart; M. P. Almeida; Andrew White
The desiderata for an ideal photon source are high brightness, high single-photon purity, and high indistinguishability. Defining brightness at the first collection lens, these properties have been simultaneously demonstrated with solid-state sources; however, absolute source efficiencies remain close to the 1% level and indistinguishability has only been demonstrated for photons emitted consecutively on the few-nanoseconds scale. Here, we employ deterministic quantum dot-micropillar devices to demonstrate solid-state single-photon sources with scalable performances. In one device, an absolute brightness at the output of a single-mode fiber of 14% and purities of 97.1%–99.0% are demonstrated. When nonresontantly excited, it emits a long stream of photons that exhibit indistinguishability up to 70%—above the classical limit of 50%—even after 33 consecutively emitted photons with a 400 ns separation between them. Resonant excitation in other devices results in near-optimal indistinguishability values: 96% at short timescales, remaining at 88% in timescales as large as 463 ns after 39 emitted photons. The performance attained by our devices brings solid-state sources into a regime suitable for scalable implementations.
Physical Review Letters | 2017
Farid Shahandeh; Martin Ringbauer; J. C. Loredo; Timothy C. Ralph
Entanglement witnesses are invaluable for efficient quantum entanglement certification without the need for expensive quantum state tomography. Yet, standard entanglement witnessing requires multiple measurements and its bounds can be elusive as a result of experimental imperfections. Here, we introduce and demonstrate a novel procedure for entanglement detection which simply and seamlessly improves any standard witnessing procedure by using additional available information to tighten the witnessing bounds. Moreover, by relaxing the requirements on the witness operators, our method removes the general need for the difficult task of witness decomposition into local observables. We experimentally demonstrate entanglement detection with our approach using a separable test operator and a simple fixed measurement device for each agent. Finally, we show that the method can be generalized to higher-dimensional and multipartite cases with a complexity that scales linearly with the number of parties.
Physical Review Letters | 2014
J. C. Loredo; Matthew A. Broome; Devin H. Smith; Andrew White
Holonomic phases--geometric and topological--have long been an intriguing aspect of physics. They are ubiquitous, ranging from observations in particle physics to applications in fault tolerant quantum computing. However, their exploration in particles sharing genuine quantum correlations lacks in observations. Here, we experimentally demonstrate the holonomic phase of two entangled photons evolving locally, which, nevertheless, gives rise to an entanglement-dependent phase. We observe its transition from geometric to topological as the entanglement between the particles is tuned from zero to maximal, and find this phase to behave more resiliently to evolution changes with increasing entanglement. Furthermore, we theoretically show that holonomic phases can directly quantify the amount of quantum correlations between the two particles. Our results open up a new avenue for observations of holonomic phenomena in multiparticle entangled quantum systems.
Physical Review Letters | 2016
J. C. Loredo; M. P. Almeida; R. Di Candia; J. S. Pedernales; J. Casanova; E. Solano; Andrew White
Measuring entanglement is a demanding task that usually requires full tomography of a quantum system, involving a number of observables that grows exponentially with the number of parties. Recently, it was suggested that adding a single ancillary qubit would allow for the efficient measurement of concurrence, and indeed any entanglement monotone associated with antilinear operations. Here, we report on the experimental implementation of such a device-an embedding quantum simulator-in photonics, encoding the entangling dynamics of a bipartite system into a tripartite one. We show that bipartite concurrence can be efficiently extracted from the measurement of merely two observables, instead of 15, without full tomographic information.
Laser & Photonics Reviews | 2017
Francesco Lenzini; Ben Haylock; J. C. Loredo; Raphael A. Abrahão; Nor A. Zakaria; Sachin Kasture; I. Sagnes; A. Lemaître; Hoang-Phuong Phan; Dzung Viet Dao; P. Senellart; M. P. Almeida; Andrew White; Mirko Lobino
A scheme for active temporal-to-spatial demultiplexing of single photons generated by a solid-state source is introduced. The scheme scales quasi-polynomially with photon number, providing a viable technological path for routing n photons in the one temporal stream from a single emitter to n different spatial modes. Active demultiplexing is demonstrated using a state-of-the-art photon source—a quantum-dot deterministically coupled to a micropillar cavity—and a custom-built demultiplexer—a network of electro-optically reconfigurable waveguides monolithically integrated in a lithium niobate chip. The measured demultiplexer performance can enable a six-photon rate three orders of magnitude higher than the equivalent heralded SPDC source, providing a platform for intermediate quantum computation protocols. (Figure presented.).
Physical Review Letters | 2017
Farid Shahandeh; Martin Ringbauer; J. C. Loredo; Timothy C. Ralph
This corrects the article DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.118.110502.
arXiv: Quantum Physics | 2018
J. C. Loredo; C. Antón; B. Reznychenko; P. Hilaire; A. Harouri; C. Millet; H. Ollivier; N. Somaschi; L. De Santis; Aristide Lemaître; I. Sagnes; L. Lanco; Alexia Auffèves; O. Krebs; Pascale Senellart
arXiv: Quantum Physics | 2017
L. De Santis; G. Coppola; C. Antón; N. Somaschi; Carmen Gomez; Aristide Lemaître; I. Sagnes; L. Lanco; J. C. Loredo; O. Krebs; Pascale Senellart