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Dive into the research topics where Joshua Nunn is active.

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Featured researches published by Joshua Nunn.


Science | 2011

Entangling macroscopic diamonds at room temperature.

K. C. Lee; Michael R. Sprague; Benjamin J. Sussman; Joshua Nunn; Nathan K. Langford; Xian-Min Jin; Tessa Champion; Patrick Michelberger; K. F. Reim; Duncan G. England; Dieter Jaksch; Ian A. Walmsley

Optical pulses are used to quantum mechanically entangle two diamonds several centimeters apart. Quantum entanglement in the motion of macroscopic solid bodies has implications both for quantum technologies and foundational studies of the boundary between the quantum and classical worlds. Entanglement is usually fragile in room-temperature solids, owing to strong interactions both internally and with the noisy environment. We generated motional entanglement between vibrational states of two spatially separated, millimeter-sized diamonds at room temperature. By measuring strong nonclassical correlations between Raman-scattered photons, we showed that the quantum state of the diamonds has positive concurrence with 98% probability. Our results show that entanglement can persist in the classical context of moving macroscopic solids in ambient conditions.


Physical Review Letters | 2011

Single-Photon-Level Quantum Memory at Room Temperature

K. F. Reim; Patrick Michelberger; K. C. Lee; Joshua Nunn; Nathan K. Langford; Ian A. Walmsley

Room-temperature, easy-to-operate quantum memories are essential building blocks for future long distance quantum information networks operating on an intercontinental scale, because devices like quantum repeaters, based on quantum memories, will have to be deployed in potentially remote, inaccessible locations. Here we demonstrate controllable, broadband and efficient storage and retrieval of weak coherent light pulses at the single-photon level in warm atomic cesium vapor using the robust far off-resonant Raman memory scheme. We show that the unconditional noise floor of this technically simple quantum memory is low enough to operate in the quantum regime, even in a room-temperature environment.


Physical Review Letters | 2008

Multimode memories in atomic ensembles

Joshua Nunn; K. F. Reim; K. C. Lee; Virginia O. Lorenz; Benjamin J. Sussman; Ian A. Walmsley; Dieter Jaksch

The ability to store multiple optical modes in a quantum memory allows for increased efficiency of quantum communication and computation. Here we compute the multimode capacity of a variety of quantum memory protocols based on light storage in ensembles of atoms. We find that adding a controlled inhomogeneous broadening improves this capacity significantly.


Journal of Modern Optics | 2016

Quantum memories: emerging applications and recent advances

Khabat Heshami; Duncan G. England; Peter C. Humphreys; Philip J. Bustard; V. M. Acosta; Joshua Nunn; Benjamin J. Sussman

Quantum light–matter interfaces are at the heart of photonic quantum technologies. Quantum memories for photons, where non-classical states of photons are mapped onto stationary matter states and preserved for subsequent retrieval, are technical realizations enabled by exquisite control over interactions between light and matter. The ability of quantum memories to synchronize probabilistic events makes them a key component in quantum repeaters and quantum computation based on linear optics. This critical feature has motivated many groups to dedicate theoretical and experimental research to develop quantum memory devices. In recent years, exciting new applications, and more advanced developments of quantum memories, have proliferated. In this review, we outline some of the emerging applications of quantum memories in optical signal processing, quantum computation and non-linear optics. We review recent experimental and theoretical developments, and their impacts on more advanced photonic quantum technologies based on quantum memories.


Optics Express | 2013

Large-alphabet time-frequency entangled quantum key distribution by means of time-to-frequency conversion

Joshua Nunn; Laura J. Wright; Christoph Söller; L. Zhang; Ian A. Walmsley; Brian J. Smith

We introduce a novel time-frequency quantum key distribution (TFQKD) scheme based on photon pairs entangled in these two conjugate degrees of freedom. The scheme uses spectral detection and phase modulation to enable measurements in the temporal basis by means of time-to-frequency conversion. This allows large-alphabet encoding to be implemented with realistic components. A general security analysis for TFQKD with binned measurements reveals a close connection with finite-dimensional QKD protocols and enables analysis of the effects of dark counts on the secure key size.


european quantum electronics conference | 2017

Ultrafast all-optical coherent control of silicon vacancy colour centres in diamond

Jonas Nils Becker; Johannes Görlitz; Carsten Arend; Christian Weinzetl; Eilon Poem; Joshua Nunn; Ian A. Walmsley; Christoph Becher

Complete control of the state of a quantum bit (qubit) is a fundamental requirement for any quantum information processing (QIP) system. In this context, all-optical control techniques offer the advantage of a well-localized and potentially ultrafast manipulation of individual qubits in multi-qubit systems. Recently, the negatively charged silicon vacancy centre (SiV−) in diamond has emerged as a novel promising system for QIP due to its superior spectral properties and advantageous electronic structure, offering an optically accessible Λ-type level system with large orbital splittings. Here, we report on all-optical resonant as well as Raman-based coherent control of a single SiV− using ultrafast pulses as short as 1 ps, significantly faster than the centres phonon-limited ground state coherence time of about 40 ns. These measurements prove the accessibility of a complete set of single-qubit operations relying solely on optical fields and pave the way for high-speed QIP applications using SiV− centres.


New Journal of Physics | 2015

Interfacing GHz-bandwidth heralded single photons with a warm vapour Raman memory

Patrick Michelberger; Tessa Champion; Michael R. Sprague; Krzysztof T. Kaczmarek; Marco Barbieri; Xian-Min Jin; Duncan G. England; W. S. Kolthammer; Dylan J. Saunders; Joshua Nunn; Ian A. Walmsley

Broadband quantum memories, used as temporal multiplexers, are a key component in photonic quantum information processing, as they make repeat-until-success strategies scalable. We demonstrate a prototype system, operating on-demand, by interfacing a warm vapour, high time-bandwidth-product Raman memory with a travelling wave spontaneous parametric down-conversion source. We store single photons and observe a clear influence of the input photon statistics on the retrieved light, which we find currently to be limited by noise. We develop a theoretical model that identifies four-wave mixing as the sole important noise source and point towards practical solutions for noise-free operation.


Physical Review Letters | 2012

Compact continuous-variable entanglement distillation.

Animesh Datta; Lijian Zhang; Joshua Nunn; Nathan K. Langford; Alvaro Feito; Martin B. Plenio; Ian A. Walmsley

Animesh Datta,1, ∗ Lijian Zhang,1 Joshua Nunn,1 Nathan K. Langford,1 Alvaro Feito,2 Martin B. Plenio,3, 4 and Ian A. Walmsley1 Clarendon Laboratory, Department of Physics, University of Oxford, OX1 3PU, United Kingdom Vestas Technology Research & Development, Venture Quays, East Cowes, PO32 6EZ, United Kingdom Institut für Theoretische Physik, Albert-Einstein-Allee 11, Universität Ulm, D-89069 Ulm, Germany QOLS, Blackett Laboratory, Imperial College London, Prince Consort Rd., SW7 2BW, United Kingdom (Dated: January 31, 2013)


Physical Review Letters | 2014

Continuous-variable quantum computing in optical time-frequency modes using quantum memories.

Peter C. Humphreys; W. Steven Kolthammer; Joshua Nunn; Marco Barbieri; Animesh Datta; Ian A. Walmsley

We develop a scheme for time-frequency encoded continuous-variable cluster-state quantum computing using quantum memories. In particular, we propose a method to produce, manipulate, and measure two-dimensional cluster states in a single spatial mode by exploiting the intrinsic time-frequency selectivity of Raman quantum memories. Time-frequency encoding enables the scheme to be extremely compact, requiring a number of memories that are a linear function of only the number of different frequencies in which the computational state is encoded, independent of its temporal duration. We therefore show that quantum memories can be a powerful component for scalable photonic quantum information processing architectures.


Journal of Physics B | 2012

High-fidelity polarization storage in a gigahertz bandwidth quantum memory

Duncan G. England; Patrick Michelberger; Tessa Champion; K. F. Reim; K. C. Lee; Michael R. Sprague; Xian-Min Jin; Nathan K. Langford; W. S. Kolthammer; Joshua Nunn; I. A. Walmsley

We demonstrate a dual-rail optical Raman memory inside a polarization interferometer; this enables us to store polarization-encoded information at GHz bandwidths in a room-temperature atomic ensemble. By performing full process tomography on the system, we measure up to 97 ± 1% process fidelity for the storage and retrieval process. At longer storage times, the process fidelity remains high, despite a loss of efficiency. The fidelity is 86 ± 4% for 1.5 μs storage time, which is 5000 times the pulse duration. Hence, high fidelity is combined with a large time-bandwidth product. This high performance, with an experimentally simple setup, demonstrates the suitability of the Raman memory for integration into large-scale quantum networks.

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Xian-Min Jin

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

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