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Dive into the research topics where Petr Siyushev is active.

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Featured researches published by Petr Siyushev.


Physical Review Letters | 2009

Low temperature studies of the excited-state structure of negatively charged nitrogen-vacancy color centers in diamond.

Anton Batalov; Jacques; F. Kaiser; Petr Siyushev; Philipp Neumann; Lachlan J. Rogers; Roger McMurtrie; Neil B. Manson; Fedor Jelezko; Jörg Wrachtrup

We report a study of the 3E excited-state structure of single negatively charged nitrogen-vacancy (NV) defects in diamond, combining resonant excitation at cryogenic temperatures and optically detected magnetic resonance. A theoretical model is developed and shows excellent agreement with experimental observations. In addition, we show that the two orbital branches associated with the 3E excited state are averaged when operating at room temperature. This study leads to an improved physical understanding of the NV defect electronic structure, which is invaluable for the development of diamond-based quantum information processing.


Physical Review B | 2009

Coherence of single spins coupled to a nuclear spin bath of varying density

Norikazu Mizuochi; Philipp Neumann; Florian Rempp; J. Beck; V. Jacques; Petr Siyushev; Kazuo Nakamura; Daniel Twitchen; Hideyuki Watanabe; Satoshi Yamasaki; Fedor Jelezko; Jörg Wrachtrup

The dynamics of single electron and nuclear spins in a diamond lattice with different 13 C nuclear spin concentration is investigated. It is shown that coherent control of up to three individual nuclei in a dense nuclear spin cluster is feasible. The free-induction decays of nuclear spin Bell states and single nuclear coherences among 13 C nuclear spins are compared and analyzed. Reduction in a free-induction-decay time T2 and a coherence time T2 upon increase in nuclear spin concentration has been found. For pure diamond, T 2 as long as 30 s and T2 of up to 0.65 ms for the electron spin has been observed. The 13 C concentration dependence of T 2 is explained by Fermi contact and dipolar interactions with nuclei in the lattice. It has been found that T2 decreases approximately as 1 / n, where n is 13 C concentration, which corresponds to the reported theoretical line of T2 for an electron spin interacting with a nuclear spin bath.


Physical Review Letters | 2013

Optically controlled switching of the charge state of a single nitrogen-vacancy center in diamond at cryogenic temperatures.

Petr Siyushev; Pinto H; Márton Vörös; Adam Gali; Fedor Jelezko; Jörg Wrachtrup

P. Siyushev, ∗ H.Pinto, A.Gali, 3 F. Jelezko, and J. Wrachtrup 5 3.Physikalisches Institut and Stuttgart Research Center of Photonic Engineering (SCoPE), Universität Stuttgart, Pfaffenwaldring 57, Stuttgart, D-70569, Germany Institute for Solid State Physics and Optics, Wigner Research Center for Physics, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Budapest, POB 49, H-1525, Hungary Department of Atomic Physics, Budapest University of Technology and Economics, Budafoki ut 8, H-1111, Budapest, Hungary Institut für Quantenoptik, Universität Ulm, D-89081 Ulm, Germany Max Planck Institute for Solid State Research, Heisenbergstraße 1, D-70569 Stuttgart, Germany


Applied Physics Letters | 2010

Monolithic diamond optics for single photon detection.

Petr Siyushev; F. Kaiser; V. Jacques; Ilja Gerhardt; S. Bischof; Helmut Fedder; J. Dodson; Matthew Markham; Daniel Twitchen; Fedor Jelezko; Jörg Wrachtrup

In this work, we experimentally demonstrate a novel and simple approach that uses off-the-shelf optical elements to enhance the collection efficiency from a single emitter. The key component is a solid immersion lens made of diamond, the host material for single color centers. We improve the excitation and detection of single emitters by one order of magnitude, as predicted by theory.


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.


Nature Communications | 2015

Photoelectric detection of electron spin resonance of nitrogen-vacancy centres in diamond.

Emile Bourgeois; A. Jarmola; Petr Siyushev; Michal Gulka; Jaroslav Hruby; Fedor Jelezko; Dmitry Budker; Milos Nesladek

The readout of negatively charged nitrogen-vacancy centre electron spins is essential for applications in quantum computation, metrology and sensing. Conventional readout protocols are based on the detection of photons emitted from nitrogen-vacancy centres, a process limited by the efficiency of photon collection. We report on an alternative principle for detecting the magnetic resonance of nitrogen-vacancy centres, allowing the direct photoelectric readout of nitrogen-vacancy centres spin state in an all-diamond device. The photocurrent detection of magnetic resonance scheme is based on the detection of charge carriers promoted to the conduction band of diamond by two-photon ionization of nitrogen-vacancy centres. The optical and photoelectric detection of magnetic resonance are compared, by performing both types of measurements simultaneously. The minima detected in the measured photocurrent at resonant microwave frequencies are attributed to the spin-dependent ionization dynamics of nitrogen-vacancy, originating from spin-selective non-radiative transitions to the metastable singlet state.


Nature Communications | 2014

Coherent properties of single rare-earth spin qubits.

Petr Siyushev; Kangwei Xia; Rolf Reuter; Mohammad Jamali; Nan Zhao; N. Yang; Changkui Duan; Nadezhda Kukharchyk; Andreas D. Wieck; Roman Kolesov; Jörg Wrachtrup

Rare-earth-doped crystals are excellent hardware for quantum storage of photons. Additional functionality of these materials is added by their waveguiding properties allowing for on-chip photonic networks. However, detection and coherent properties of rare-earth single-spin qubits have not been demonstrated so far. Here we present experimental results on high-fidelity optical initialization, efficient coherent manipulation and optical readout of a single-electron spin of Ce(3+) ion in a yttrium aluminium garnet crystal. Under dynamic decoupling, spin coherence lifetime reaches T2 = 2 ms and is almost limited by the measured spin-lattice relaxation time T1 = 4.5 ms. Strong hyperfine coupling to aluminium nuclear spins suggests that cerium electron spins can be exploited as an interface between photons and long-lived nuclear spin memory. Combined with high brightness of Ce(3+) emission and a possibility of creating photonic circuits out of the host material, this makes cerium spins an interesting option for integrated quantum photonics.


Nature | 2014

Molecular photons interfaced with alkali atoms

Petr Siyushev; Guilherme Stein; Jörg Wrachtrup; Ilja Gerhardt

Future quantum communication will rely on the integration of single-photon sources, quantum memories and systems with strong single-photon nonlinearities. Two key parameters are crucial for the single-photon source: a high photon flux with a very small bandwidth, and a spectral match to other components of the system. Atoms or ions may act as single-photon sources—owing to their narrowband emission and their intrinsic spectral match to other atomic systems—and can serve as quantum nonlinear elements. Unfortunately, their emission rates are still limited, even for highly efficient cavity designs. Single solid-state emitters such as single organic dye molecules are significantly brighter and allow for narrowband photons; they have shown potential in a variety of quantum optical experiments but have yet to be interfaced with other components such as stationary memory qubits. Here we describe the optical interaction between Fourier-limited photons from a single organic molecule and atomic alkali vapours, which can constitute an efficient quantum memory. Single-photon emission rates reach up to several hundred thousand counts per second and show a high spectral brightness of 30,000 detectable photons per second per megahertz of bandwidth. The molecular emission is robust and we demonstrate perfect tuning to the spectral transitions of the sodium D line and efficient filtering, even for emitters at ambient conditions. In addition, we achieve storage of molecular photons originating from a single dibenzanthanthrene molecule in atomic sodium vapour. Given the large set of molecular emission lines matching to atomic transitions, our results enable the combination of almost ideal single-photon sources with various atomic vapours, such that experiments with giant single-photon nonlinearities, mediated, for example, by Rydberg atoms, become feasible.


New Journal of Physics | 2009

Low-temperature optical characterization of a near-infrared single-photon emitter in nanodiamonds

Petr Siyushev; V. Jacques; Igor Aharonovich; F. Kaiser; Tina Muller; L Lombez; Mete Atatüre; Stefania Castelletto; Steven Prawer; Fedor Jelezko; Jörg Wrachtrup

In this paper, we study the optical properties of single defects emitting in the near infrared (NIR) in nanodiamonds at liquid helium temperature. The nanodiamonds are synthesized using a microwave chemical vapor deposition method followed by nickel implantation and annealing. We show that single defects exhibit several striking features at cryogenic temperature: the photoluminescence is strongly concentrated into a sharp zero- phonon line (ZPL) in the NIR, the radiative lifetime is in the nanosecond range and the emission is linearly polarized. The spectral stability of the defects is then investigated. An optical resonance linewidth of 4GHz is measured using resonant excitation on the ZPL. Although Fourier-transform-limited emission is not achieved, our results show that it might be possible to use consecutive photons emitted in the NIR by single defects in diamond nanocrystals to perform two photon interference experiments, which are at the heart of linear quantum computing protocols.


Nature Nanotechnology | 2013

Readout and control of a single nuclear spin with a metastable electron spin ancilla

Sang-Yun Lee; Matthias Widmann; Torsten Rendler; Marcus W. Doherty; Thomas M. Babinec; Sen Yang; Moritz Eyer; Petr Siyushev; Birgit Hausmann; Marko Loncar; Zoltán Bodrog; Adam Gali; Neil B. Manson; Helmut Fedder; Jörg Wrachtrup

Electron and nuclear spins associated with point defects in insulators are promising systems for solid-state quantum technology. The electron spin is usually used for readout and addressing, and nuclear spins are used as exquisite quantum bits and memory systems. With these systems, single-shot readout of single nuclear spins as well as entanglement, aided by the electron spin, have been shown. Although the electron spin in this example is essential for readout, it usually limits the nuclear spin coherence, leading to a quest for defects with spin-free ground states. Here, we isolate a hitherto unidentified defect in diamond and use it at room temperature to demonstrate optical spin polarization and readout with exceptionally high contrast (up to 45%), coherent manipulation of an individual excited triplet state spin, and coherent nuclear spin manipulation using the triplet electron spin as a metastable ancilla. We demonstrate nuclear magnetic resonance and Rabi oscillations of the uncoupled nuclear spin in the spin-free electronic ground state. Our study demonstrates that nuclei coupled to single metastable electron spins are useful quantum systems with long memory times, in spite of electronic relaxation processes.

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Kangwei Xia

University of Stuttgart

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Rolf Reuter

University of Stuttgart

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