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Dive into the research topics where Mirko Lobino is active.

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Featured researches published by Mirko Lobino.


Science | 2010

Quantum Walks of Correlated Photons

Alberto Peruzzo; Mirko Lobino; Jonathan C. F. Matthews; Nobuyuki Matsuda; Alberto Politi; Konstantinos Poulios; Xiao-Qi Zhou; Yoav Lahini; Nur Ismail; Kerstin Worhoff; Yaron Bromberg; Yaron Silberberg; Mark G. Thompson; Jeremy L. O'Brien

A Correlated Quantum Walk Random walks are powerful tools for modeling statistical events. The analogous quantum walk involves particles tunneling between available sites. Peruzzo et al. (p. 1500; see the Perspective by Hillery) now report on the quantum walk of a correlated pair of photons propagating through a coupled waveguide array. The output pattern resulting from the injection of two correlated photons possess quantum features, indicating that the photons retain their correlations as they walk randomly through the waveguide array, allowing scale-up and parallel searches over many possible paths. Pairs of correlated photons retain their quantum-mechanical correlations as they propagate through a waveguide maze. Quantum walks of correlated particles offer the possibility of studying large-scale quantum interference; simulating biological, chemical, and physical systems; and providing a route to universal quantum computation. We have demonstrated quantum walks of two identical photons in an array of 21 continuously evanescently coupled waveguides in a SiOxNy chip. We observed quantum correlations, violating a classical limit by 76 standard deviations, and found that the correlations depended critically on the input state of the quantum walk. These results present a powerful approach to achieving quantum walks with correlated particles to encode information in an exponentially larger state space.


Physical Review Letters | 2008

Quantum Memory for Squeezed Light

Jurgen Appel; Eden Figueroa; Dmitry Korystov; Mirko Lobino; A. I. Lvovsky

We produce a 600-ns pulse of 1.86-dB squeezed vacuum at 795 nm in an optical parametric amplifier and store it in a rubidium vapor cell for 1 mus using electromagnetically induced transparency. The recovered pulse, analyzed using time-domain homodyne tomography, exhibits up to 0.21+/-0.04 dB of squeezing. We identify the factors leading to the degradation of squeezing and investigate the phase evolution of the atomic coherence during the storage interval.


Nature Photonics | 2012

Generating, manipulating and measuring entanglement and mixture with a reconfigurable photonic circuit

Peter Shadbolt; Maria Rodas Verde; Alberto Peruzzo; Alberto Politi; Anthony Laing; Mirko Lobino; Jonathan C. F. Matthews; Mark G. Thompson; Jeremy L. O'Brien

Researchers demonstrate a reconfigurable integrated quantum photonic circuit. The device comprises a two-qubit entangling gate, several Hadamard-like gates and eight variable phase shifters. The set-up is used to generate entangled states, violate a Bell-type inequality with a continuum of partially entangled states and demonstrate the generation of arbitrary one-qubit mixed states.


Applied Physics Letters | 2011

Generation of correlated photon pairs in a chalcogenide As2S3 waveguide

C Xiong; Graham D. Marshall; Alberto Peruzzo; Mirko Lobino; Alex S. Clark; D.-Y. Choi; Steve Madden; Chandra M. Natarajan; Michael G. Tanner; Robert H. Hadfield; S. N. Dorenbos; T. Zijlstra; Valery Zwiller; Mark G. Thompson; John Rarity; M. J. Steel; Barry Luther-Davies; Benjamin J. Eggleton; Jeremy L. O'Brien

We demonstrate a 1550 nm correlated photon-pair source in an integrated glass platform—a chalcogenide As2S3 waveguide. A measured pair coincidence rate of 80 s−1 was achieved using 57 mW of continuous-wave pump. The coincidence to accidental ratio was shown to be limited by spontaneous Raman scattering effects that are expected to be mitigated by using a pulsed pump source.


Applied Physics Letters | 2012

Measuring protein concentration with entangled photons

Andrea Crespi; Mirko Lobino; Jonathan C. F. Matthews; Alberto Politi; Christopher R. Neal; Roberta Ramponi; Roberto Osellame; Jeremy L. O'Brien

Optical interferometry is amongst the most sensitive techniques for precision measurement. By increasing the light intensity, a more precise measurement can usually be made. However, if the sample is light sensitive entangled states can achieve the same precision with less exposure. This concept has been demonstrated in measurements of known optical components. Here, we use two-photon entangled states to measure the concentration of a blood protein in an aqueous buffer solution. We use an opto-fluidic device that couples a waveguide interferometer with a microfluidic channel. These results point the way to practical applications of quantum metrology to light-sensitive samples.


Science | 2008

Complete Characterization of Quantum-Optical Processes

Mirko Lobino; Dmitry Korystov; Connor Kupchak; Eden Figueroa; Barry C. Sanders; A. I. Lvovsky

The technologies of quantum information and quantum control are rapidly improving, but full exploitation of their capabilities requires complete characterization and assessment of processes that occur within quantum devices. We present a method for characterizing, with arbitrarily high accuracy, any quantum optical process. Our protocol recovers complete knowledge of the process by studying, via homodyne tomography, its effect on a set of coherent states, that is, classical fields produced by common laser sources. We demonstrate the capability of our protocol by evaluating and experimentally verifying the effect of a test process on squeezed vacuum.


Physical Review Letters | 2014

Reference-frame-independent quantum-key-distribution server with a telecom tether for an on-chip client.

Pei Zhang; K. Aungskunsiri; Eduardo Martín-López; Joachim Wabnig; Mirko Lobino; R. W. Nock; J. Munns; D. Bonneau; P. Jiang; Hongwei Li; Anthony Laing; John Rarity; Antti Niskanen; Mark G. Thompson; Jeremy L. O'Brien

We demonstrate a client-server quantum key distribution (QKD) scheme. Large resources such as laser and detectors are situated at the server side, which is accessible via telecom fiber to a client requiring only an on-chip polarization rotator, which may be integrated into a handheld device. The detrimental effects of unstable fiber birefringence are overcome by employing the reference-frame-independent QKD protocol for polarization qubits in polarization maintaining fiber, where standard QKD protocols fail, as we show for comparison. This opens the way for quantum enhanced secure communications between companies and members of the general public equipped with handheld mobile devices, via telecom-fiber tethering.


Applied Physics Letters | 2011

Correlated photon-pair generation in a periodically poled MgO doped stoichiometric lithium tantalate reverse proton exchanged waveguide

Mirko Lobino; Graham D. Marshall; Chunle Xiong; Alex S. Clark; Damien Bonneau; Chandra M. Natarajan; Michael G. Tanner; Robert H. Hadfield; S. N. Dorenbos; T. Zijlstra; Val Zwiller; Marco Marangoni; Roberta Ramponi; Mark G. Thompson; Benjamin J. Eggleton; Jeremy L. O'Brien

We demonstrate photon-pair generation in a reverse proton exchanged waveguide fabricated on a periodically poled magnesium doped stoichiometric lithium tantalate substrate. Detected pairs are generated via a cascaded second order nonlinear process where a pump laser at wavelength of 1.55 μm is first doubled in frequency by second harmonic generation and subsequently downconverted around the same spectral region. Pairs are detected at a rate of 42/s with a coincidence to accidental ratio of 0.7. This cascaded pair generation process is similar to four-wave-mixing where two pump photons annihilate and create a correlated photon pair.


Physical Review Letters | 2009

Memory for Light as a Quantum Process

Mirko Lobino; Connor Kupchak; Eden Figueroa; A. I. Lvovsky

We report complete characterization of an optical memory based on electromagnetically induced transparency. We recover the superoperator associated with the memory, under two different working conditions, by means of a quantum process tomography technique that involves storage of coherent states and their characterization upon retrieval. In this way, we can predict the quantum state retrieved from the memory for any input, for example, the squeezed vacuum or the Fock state. We employ the acquired superoperator to verify the nonclassicality benchmark for the storage of a Gaussian distributed set of coherent states.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2017

Single-Crystalline 3C-SiC anodically Bonded onto Glass: An Excellent Platform for High-Temperature Electronics and Bioapplications

Hoang-Phuong Phan; Han-Hao Cheng; Toan Khac Dinh; Barry J. Wood; Tuan-Khoa Nguyen; Fengwen Mu; Harshad Kamble; Raja Vadivelu; Glenn Walker; Leonie Hold; Alan Iacopi; Ben Haylock; Dzung Viet Dao; Mirko Lobino; Tadatomo Suga; Nam-Trung Nguyen

Single-crystal cubic silicon carbide has attracted great attention for MEMS and electronic devices. However, current leakage at the SiC/Si junction at high temperatures and visible-light absorption of the Si substrate are main obstacles hindering the use of the platform in a broad range of applications. To solve these bottlenecks, we present a new platform of single crystal SiC on an electrically insulating and transparent substrate using an anodic bonding process. The SiC thin film was prepared on a 150 mm Si with a surface roughness of 7 nm using LPCVD. The SiC/Si wafer was bonded to a glass substrate and then the Si layer was completely removed through wafer polishing and wet etching. The bonded SiC/glass samples show a sharp bonding interface of less than 15 nm characterized using deep profile X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, a strong bonding strength of approximately 20 MPa measured from the pulling test, and relatively high optical transparency in the visible range. The transferred SiC film also exhibited good conductivity and a relatively high temperature coefficient of resistance varying from -12 000 to -20 000 ppm/K, which is desirable for thermal sensors. The biocompatibility of SiC/glass was also confirmed through mouse 3T3 fibroblasts cell-culturing experiments. Taking advantage of the superior electrical properties and biocompatibility of SiC, the developed SiC-on-glass platform offers unprecedented potentials for high-temperature electronics as well as bioapplications.

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