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Dive into the research topics where Michael J. Burek is active.

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Featured researches published by Michael J. Burek.


Science | 2016

An integrated diamond nanophotonics platform for quantum-optical networks

Alp Sipahigil; Ruffin E. Evans; Denis D. Sukachev; Michael J. Burek; Johannes Borregaard; Mihir K. Bhaskar; Christian T. Nguyen; Jose Pacheco; Haig A. Atikian; Charles Meuwly; Ryan Camacho; Fedor Jelezko; Edward S. Bielejec; Hongkun Park; Marko Loncar; Mikhail D. Lukin

Efficient interfaces between photons and quantum emitters form the basis for quantum networks and enable nonlinear optical devices operating at the single-photon level. We demonstrate an integrated platform for scalable quantum nanophotonics based on silicon-vacancy (SiV) color centers coupled to nanoscale diamond devices. By placing SiV centers inside diamond photonic crystal cavities, we realize a quantum-optical switch controlled by a single color center. We control the switch using SiV metastable orbital states and verify optical switching at the single-photon level by using photon correlation measurements. We use Raman transitions to realize a single-photon source with a tunable frequency and bandwidth in a diamond waveguide. Finally, we create entanglement between two SiV centers by detecting indistinguishable Raman photons emitted into a single waveguide. Entanglement is verified using a novel superradiant feature observed in photon correlation measurements, paving the way for the realization of quantum networks.Integrated quantum nanophotonics Technologies that exploit the rules of quantum mechanics offer a potential advantage over classical devices in terms of sensitivity. Sipahigil et al. combined the quantum optical features of silicon-vacancy color centers with diamond-based photonic cavities to form a platform for integrated quantum nanophotonics (see the Perspective by Hanson). They could thus generate single photons from the color centers, optically switch light in the cavity by addressing the state of the color center, and quantum-mechanically entangle two color centers positioned in the cavity. The work presents a viable route to develop an integrated platform for quantum networks. Science, this issue p. 847; see also p. 835 An integrated quantum optical platform is demonstrated using silicon vacancy color centers and diamond photonics. Efficient interfaces between photons and quantum emitters form the basis for quantum networks and enable optical nonlinearities at the single-photon level. We demonstrate an integrated platform for scalable quantum nanophotonics based on silicon-vacancy (SiV) color centers coupled to diamond nanodevices. By placing SiV centers inside diamond photonic crystal cavities, we realize a quantum-optical switch controlled by a single color center. We control the switch using SiV metastable states and observe optical switching at the single-photon level. Raman transitions are used to realize a single-photon source with a tunable frequency and bandwidth in a diamond waveguide. By measuring intensity correlations of indistinguishable Raman photons emitted into a single waveguide, we observe a quantum interference effect resulting from the superradiant emission of two entangled SiV centers.


Nano Letters | 2013

Coupling of NV Centers to Photonic Crystal Nanobeams in Diamond

Birgit Hausmann; Brendan Shields; Qimin Quan; Yiwen Chu; N. P. de Leon; Ruffin E. Evans; Michael J. Burek; A. S. Zibrov; Matthew Markham; Daniel Twitchen; Hongkun Park; M. D. Lukin; M. Loncǎr

The realization of efficient optical interfaces for solid-state atom-like systems is an important problem in quantum science with potential applications in quantum communications and quantum information processing. We describe and demonstrate a technique for coupling single nitrogen vacancy (NV) centers to suspended diamond photonic crystal cavities with quality factors up to 6000. Specifically, we present an enhancement of the NV centers zero-phonon line fluorescence by a factor of ~ 7 in low-temperature measurements.


Optics Express | 2014

Integrated high quality factor lithium niobate microdisk resonators.

Cheng Wang; Michael J. Burek; Zin Lin; Haig A. Atikian; Vivek Venkataraman; I-Chun Huang; Peter Randolph Hazard Stark; Marko Loncar

Lithium Niobate (LN) is an important nonlinear optical material. Here we demonstrate LN microdisk resonators that feature optical quality factor ~10(5), realized using robust and scalable fabrication techniques, that operate over a wide wavelength range spanning visible and near infrared. Using our resonators, and leveraging LNs large second order optical nonlinearity, we demonstrate on-chip second harmonic generation with a conversion efficiency of 0.109 W(-1).


Nature Communications | 2014

High quality-factor optical nanocavities in bulk single-crystal diamond

Michael J. Burek; Yiwen Chu; Madelaine S. Z. Liddy; Parth Patel; Jake Rochman; Srujan Meesala; Wooyoung Hong; Qimin Quan; Mikhail D. Lukin; Marko Loncar

Single-crystal diamond, with its unique optical, mechanical and thermal properties, has emerged as a promising material with applications in classical and quantum optics. However, the lack of heteroepitaxial growth and scalable fabrication techniques remains the major limiting factors preventing more wide-spread development and application of diamond photonics. In this work, we overcome this difficulty by adapting angled-etching techniques, previously developed for realization of diamond nanomechanical resonators, to fabricate racetrack resonators and photonic crystal cavities in bulk single-crystal diamond. Our devices feature large optical quality factors, in excess of 105, and operate over a wide wavelength range, spanning visible and telecom. These newly developed high-Q diamond optical nanocavities open the door for a wealth of applications, ranging from nonlinear optics and chemical sensing, to quantum information processing and cavity optomechanics.


Nano Letters | 2014

Coherent optical transitions in implanted nitrogen vacancy centers

Yiwen Chu; N. P. de Leon; Brendan Shields; Birgit Hausmann; Ruffin E. Evans; E. Togan; Michael J. Burek; Matthew Markham; Alastair Stacey; A. S. Zibrov; Amir Yacoby; Daniel Twitchen; Marko Loncar; Hongkun Park; Patrick Maletinsky; Mikhail D. Lukin

We report the observation of stable optical transitions in nitrogen-vacancy (NV) centers created by ion implantation. Using a combination of high temperature annealing and subsequent surface treatment, we reproducibly create NV centers with zero-phonon lines (ZPL) exhibiting spectral diffusion that is close to the lifetime-limited optical line width. The residual spectral diffusion is further reduced by using resonant optical pumping to maintain the NV(-) charge state. This approach allows for placement of NV centers with excellent optical coherence in a well-defined device layer, which is a crucial step in the development of diamond-based devices for quantum optics, nanophotonics, and quantum information science.


Physical Review Letters | 2017

Quantum nonlinear optics with a germanium-vacancy color center in a nanoscale diamond waveguide

Mihir K. Bhaskar; Denis D. Sukachev; Alp Sipahigil; Ruffin E. Evans; Michael J. Burek; Christian T. Nguyen; Lachlan J. Rogers; Petr Siyushev; Mathias H. Metsch; Hongkun Park; Fedor Jelezko; Marko Loncar; Mikhail D. Lukin

We demonstrate a quantum nanophotonics platform based on germanium-vacancy (GeV) color centers in fiber-coupled diamond nanophotonic waveguides. We show that GeV optical transitions have a high quantum efficiency and are nearly lifetime broadened in such nanophotonic structures. These properties yield an efficient interface between waveguide photons and a single GeV center without the use of a cavity or slow-light waveguide. As a result, a single GeV center reduces waveguide transmission by 18±1% on resonance in a single pass. We use a nanophotonic interferometer to perform homodyne detection of GeV resonance fluorescence. By probing the photon statistics of the output field, we demonstrate that the GeV-waveguide system is nonlinear at the single-photon level.


arXiv: Optics | 2015

On-chip diamond Raman laser

Pawel Latawiec; Vivek Venkataraman; Michael J. Burek; Birgit J. M. Hausmann; Irfan Bulu; Marko Loncar

Synthetic single-crystal diamond has recently emerged as a promising platform for Raman lasers at exotic wavelengths due to its giant Raman shift, large transparency window and excellent thermal properties yielding a greatly enhanced figure-of-merit compared to conventional materials. To date, diamond Raman lasers have been realized using bulk plates placed inside macroscopic cavities, requiring careful alignment and resulting in high threshold powers (~W-kW). Here we demonstrate an on-chip Raman laser based on fully-integrated, high quality-factor, diamond racetrack micro-resonators embedded in silica. Pumping at telecom wavelengths, we show Stokes output discretely tunable over a ~100nm bandwidth around 2-{\mu}m with output powers >250 {\mu}W, extending the functionality of diamond Raman lasers to an interesting wavelength range at the edge of the mid-infrared spectrum. Continuous-wave operation with only ~85 mW pump threshold power in the feeding waveguide is demonstrated along with continuous, mode-hop-free tuning over ~7.5 GHz in a compact, integrated-optics platform.


Physical review applied | 2016

Enhanced Strain Coupling of Nitrogen-Vacancy Spins to Nanoscale Diamond Cantilevers

Srujan Meesala; Young-Ik Sohn; Haig A. Atikian; Samuel Kim; Michael J. Burek; Jennifer T. Choy; Marko Loncar

Nitrogen vacancy (NV) centers can couple to confined phonons in diamond mechanical resonators via the effect of lattice strain on their energy levels. Access to the strong spin-phonon coupling regime with this system requires resonators with nanoscale dimensions in order to overcome the weak strain response of the NV ground state spin sublevels. In this work, we study NVs in diamond cantilevers with lateral dimensions of a few hundred nm. Coupling of the NV ground state spin to the mechanical mode is detected in electron spin resonance (ESR), and its temporal dynamics are measured via spin echo. Our small mechanical mode volume leads to a 10-100X enhancement in spin-phonon coupling strength over previous NV-strain coupling demonstrations. This is an important step towards strong spin-phonon coupling, which can enable phonon-mediated quantum information processing and quantum metrology.


arXiv: Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics | 2016

Diamond optomechanical crystals

Michael J. Burek; Justin D. Cohen; Seán M. Meenehan; Nayera El-Sawah; Cleaven Chia; Thibaud Ruelle; Srujan Meesala; Jake Rochman; Haig A. Atikian; Matthew Markham; Daniel Twitchen; Mikhail D. Lukin; Oskar Painter; Marko Loncar

Cavity-optomechanical systems realized in single-crystal diamond are poised to benefit from its extraordinary material properties, including low mechanical dissipation and a wide optical transparency window. Diamond is also rich in optically active defects, such as the nitrogen-vacancy (NV) and silicon-vacancy (SiV) centers, which behave as atom-like systems in the solid state. Predictions and observations of coherent coupling of the NV electronic spin to phonons via lattice strain has motivated the development of diamond nanomechanical devices aimed at realization of hybrid quantum systems, in which phonons provide an interface with diamond spins. In this work, we demonstrate diamond optomechanical crystals (OMCs), a device platform to enable such applications, wherein the co-localization of ~ 200 THz photons and few to 10 GHz phonons in a quasi-periodic diamond nanostructure leads to coupling of an optical cavity field to a mechanical mode via radiation pressure. In contrast to other material systems, diamond OMCs operating in the resolved-sideband regime possess large intracavity photon capacity (> 10


Physical review applied | 2017

Fiber-Coupled Diamond Quantum Nanophotonic Interface

Michael J. Burek; Charles Meuwly; Ruffin E. Evans; Mihir K. Bhaskar; Alp Sipahigil; Srujan Meesala; Bartholomeus Machielse; Denis D. Sukachev; Christian T. Nguyen; Jose Pacheco; Edward S. Bielejec; Mikhail D. Lukin; Marko Loncar

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