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Dive into the research topics where S. D. Jenkins is active.

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Featured researches published by S. D. Jenkins.


Physical Review Letters | 2006

Entanglement of remote atomic qubits

Dzmitry Matsukevich; T. Chaneliere; S. D. Jenkins; Shau-Yu Lan; T. A. B. Kennedy; A. Kuzmich

We report observations of entanglement of two remote atomic qubits, achieved by generating an entangled state of an atomic qubit and a single photon at site , transmitting the photon to site in an adjacent laboratory through an optical fiber, and converting the photon into an atomic qubit. Entanglement of the two remote atomic qubits is inferred by performing, locally, quantum state transfer of each of the atomic qubits onto a photonic qubit and subsequent measurement of polarization correlations in violation of the Bell inequality [EQUATION: SEE TEXT]. We experimentally determine [EQUATION: SEE TEXT]. Entanglement of two remote atomic qubits, each qubit consisting of two independent spin wave excitations, and reversible, coherent transfer of entanglement between matter and light represent important advances in quantum information science.


Physical Review Letters | 2005

Entanglement of a Photon and a Collective Atomic Excitation

Dzmitry Matsukevich; T. Chaneliere; M. Bhattacharya; Shau-Yu Lan; S. D. Jenkins; T. A. B. Kennedy; A. Kuzmich

We describe a new experimental approach to probabilistic atom-photon (signal) entanglement. Two qubit states are encoded as orthogonal collective spin excitations of an unpolarized atomic ensemble. After a programmable delay, the atomic excitation is converted into a photon (idler). Polarization states of both the signal and the idler are recorded and are found to be in violation of the Bell inequality. Atomic coherence times exceeding several microseconds are achieved by switching off all the trapping fields--including the quadrupole magnetic field of the magneto-optical trap--and zeroing out the residual ambient magnetic field.


Physical Review Letters | 2007

Multiplexed memory-insensitive quantum repeaters.

O. A. Collins; S. D. Jenkins; A. Kuzmich; T. A. B. Kennedy

Long-distance quantum communication via distant pairs of entangled quantum bits (qubits) is the first step towards secure message transmission and distributed quantum computing. To date, the most promising proposals require quantum repeaters to mitigate the exponential decrease in communication rate due to optical fiber losses. However, these are exquisitely sensitive to the lifetimes of their memory elements. We propose a multiplexing of quantum nodes that should enable the construction of quantum networks that are largely insensitive to the coherence times of the quantum memory elements.


Physical Review Letters | 2006

Quantum Telecommunication Based on Atomic Cascade Transitions

T. Chaneliere; Dzmitry Matsukevich; S. D. Jenkins; T. A. B. Kennedy; Michael S. Chapman; A. Kuzmich

A quantum repeater at telecommunications wavelengths with long-lived atomic memory is proposed, and its critical elements are experimentally demonstrated using a cold atomic ensemble. Via atomic cascade emission, an entangled pair of 1.53 microm and 780 nm photons is generated. The former is ideal for long-distance quantum communication, and the latter is naturally suited for mapping to a long-lived atomic memory. Together with our previous demonstration of photonic-to-atomic qubit conversion, both of the essential elements for the proposed telecommunications quantum repeater have now been realized.


Physical Review Letters | 2006

Deterministic Single Photons via Conditional Quantum Evolution

Dzmitry Matsukevich; T. Chaneliere; S. D. Jenkins; Shau-Yu Lan; T. A. B. Kennedy; A. Kuzmich

A source of deterministic single photons is proposed and demonstrated by the application of a measurement-based feedback protocol to a heralded single-photon source consisting of an ensemble of cold rubidium atoms. Our source is stationary and produces a photoelectric detection record with sub-Poissonian statistics.


Physical Review Letters | 2011

Coherent control of nanoscale light localization in metamaterial: creating and positioning isolated subwavelength energy hot spots.

T.S. Kao; S. D. Jenkins; Janne Ruostekoski; N.I. Zheludev

We show the strong optically induced interactions between discrete metamolecules in a metamaterial system and coherent monochromatic continuous light beam with a spatially tailored phase profile can be used to prepare a subwavelength scale energy localization. Well-isolated energy hot spots of a fraction of a wavelength can be created and positioned on the metamaterial landscape offering new opportunities for data storage and imaging applications.


Physical Review Letters | 2014

Observation of suppression of light scattering induced by dipole-dipole interactions in a cold-atom ensemble.

Joseph Pellegrino; Ronan Bourgain; Stephan Jennewein; Y. Sortais; Antoine Browaeys; S. D. Jenkins; Janne Ruostekoski

We study the emergence of collective scattering in the presence of dipole-dipole interactions when we illuminate a cold cloud of rubidium atoms with a near-resonant and weak intensity laser. The size of the atomic sample is comparable to the wavelength of light. When we gradually increase the number of atoms from 1 to ~450, we observe a broadening of the line, a small redshift and, consistently with these, a strong suppression of the scattered light with respect to the noninteracting atom case. We compare our data to numerical simulations of the optical response, which include the internal level structure of the atoms.


Physical Review Letters | 2013

Metamaterial transparency induced by cooperative electromagnetic interactions

S. D. Jenkins; Janne Ruostekoski

We propose a cooperative asymmetry-induced transparency, CAIT, formed by collective excitations in metamaterial arrays of discrete resonators. CAIT can display a sharp transmission resonance even when the constituent resonators individually exhibit broad resonances. We further show how dynamically reconfiguring the metamaterial allows one to actively control the transparency. While reminiscent of electromagnetically induced transparency, which can be described by independent emitters, CAIT relies on a cooperative response resulting from strong radiative couplings between the resonators.


Physical Review Letters | 2007

Quantum interference of electromagnetic fields from remote quantum memories.

T. Chaneliere; Dzmitry Matsukevich; S. D. Jenkins; Shau-Yu Lan; R. Zhao; T. A. B. Kennedy; A. Kuzmich

We observe quantum, Hong-Ou-Mandel, interference of fields produced by two remote atomic memories. High-visibility interference is obtained by utilizing the finite atomic memory time in four-photon delayed coincidence measurements. Interference of fields from remote atomic memories is a crucial element in protocols for scalable entanglement distribution.


Physical Review Letters | 2006

Observation of dark state polariton collapses and revivals

Dzmitry Matsukevich; T. Chaneliere; S. D. Jenkins; Shau-Yu Lan; T. A. B. Kennedy; A. Kuzmich

By time-dependent variation of a control field, both coherent and single-photon states of light are stored in, and retrieved from, a cold atomic gas. The efficiency of retrieval is studied as a function of the storage time in an applied magnetic field. A series of collapses and revivals is observed, in very good agreement with theoretical predictions. The observations are interpreted in terms of the time evolution of the collective excitation of atomic spin wave and light wave, known as the dark-state polariton.

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A. Kuzmich

Georgia Institute of Technology

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T. A. B. Kennedy

Georgia Institute of Technology

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T. Chaneliere

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Dzmitry Matsukevich

Georgia Institute of Technology

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Shau-Yu Lan

Georgia Institute of Technology

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R. Zhao

Georgia Institute of Technology

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N.I. Zheludev

Nanyang Technological University

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Brian Kennedy

Georgia Institute of Technology

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O. A. Collins

Georgia Institute of Technology

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