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Dive into the research topics where Sander N. Dorenbos is active.

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Featured researches published by Sander N. Dorenbos.


international quantum electronics conference | 2013

Kilometre-range, high resolution depth imaging using 1560 nm wavelength single-photon detection

Aongus McCarthy; Nils J. Krichel; Nathan R. Gemmell; Ximing Ren; Michael G. Tanner; Sander N. Dorenbos; Val Zwiller; Robert H. Hadfield; Gerald S. Buller

This paper highlights a significant advance in time-of-flight depth imaging: by using a scanning transceiver which incorporated a free-running, low noise superconducting nanowire single-photon detector, we were able to obtain centimeter resolution depth images of low-signature objects in daylight at stand-off distances of the order of one kilometer at the relatively eye-safe wavelength of 1560 nm. The detector used had an efficiency of 18% at 1 kHz dark count rate, and the overall system jitter was ~100 ps. The depth images were acquired by illuminating the scene with an optical output power level of less than 250 µW average, and using per-pixel dwell times in the millisecond regime.


Nano Letters | 2010

On-chip single plasmon detection.

Reinier W. Heeres; Sander N. Dorenbos; Benny Koene; Glenn S. Solomon; Leo P. Kouwenhoven; Valery Zwiller

Surface plasmon polaritons (plasmons) have the potential to interface electronic and optical devices. They could prove extremely useful for integrated quantum information processing. Here we demonstrate on-chip electrical detection of single plasmons propagating along gold waveguides. The plasmons are excited using the single-photon emission of an optically emitting quantum dot. After propagating for several micrometers, the plasmons are coupled to a superconducting detector in the near-field. Correlation measurements prove that single plasmons are being detected.


Optics Express | 2011

Generation of degenerate, factorizable, pulsed squeezed light at telecom wavelengths

Thomas Gerrits; Martin J. Stevens; Burm Baek; Brice Calkins; Adriana E. Lita; Scott C. Glancy; Emanuel Knill; Sae Woo Nam; Richard P. Mirin; Robert H. Hadfield; Ryan S. Bennink; Warren P. Grice; Sander N. Dorenbos; T. Zijlstra; Teun M. Klapwijk; Val Zwiller

We characterize a periodically poled KTP crystal that produces an entangled, two-mode, squeezed state with orthogonal polarizations, nearly identical, factorizable frequency modes, and few photons in unwanted frequency modes. We focus the pump beam to create a nearly circular joint spectral probability distribution between the two modes. After disentangling the two modes, we observe Hong-Ou-Mandel interference with a raw (background corrected) visibility of 86% (95%) when an 8.6 nm bandwidth spectral filter is applied. We measure second order photon correlations of the entangled and disentangled squeezed states with both superconducting nanowire single-photon detectors and photon-number-resolving transition-edge sensors. Both methods agree and verify that the detected modes contain the desired photon number distributions.


Optics Communications | 2014

Gallium arsenide (GaAs) quantum photonic waveguide circuits

Jianwei Wang; Alberto Santamato; Pisu Jiang; Damien Bonneau; Erman Engin; Joshua W. Silverstone; M. Lermer; J. Beetz; M. Kamp; Sven Höfling; Michael G. Tanner; Chandra M. Natarajan; Robert H. Hadfield; Sander N. Dorenbos; Val Zwiller; Jeremy L. O’Brien; Mark G. Thompson

Integrated quantum photonics is a promising approach for future practical and large-scale quantum information processing technologies, with the prospect of on-chip generation, manipulation and measurement of complex quantum states of light. The gallium arsenide (GaAs) material system is a promising technology platform, and has already successfully demonstrated key components including waveguide integrated single-photon sources and integrated single-photon detectors. However, quantum circuits capable of manipulating quantum states of light have so far not been investigated in this material system. Here, we report GaAs photonic circuits for the manipulation of single-photon and two-photon states. Two-photon quantum interference with a visibility of 94.9±1.3% was observed in GaAs directional couplers. Classical and quantum interference fringes with visibilities of 98.6±1.3% and 84.4±1.5% respectively were demonstrated in Mach–Zehnder interferometers exploiting the electro-optic Pockels effect. This work paves the way for a fully integrated quantum technology platform based on the GaAs material system.


Optics Express | 2010

Linewidth narrowing and Purcell enhancement in photonic crystal cavities on an Er-doped silicon nitride platform.

Yiyang Gong; Maria Makarova; Selcuk Yerci; Rui Li; Martin J. Stevens; Burm Baek; Sae Woo Nam; Robert H. Hadfield; Sander N. Dorenbos; Val Zwiller; Jelena Vuckovic; Luca Dal Negro

Light emission from Er-doped amorphous silicon nitride coupled to photonic crystal resonators is studied. The results demonstrate Purcell enhanced Er absorption and linewidth narrowing of the cavity resonance with increasing pump power.


Superconductor Science and Technology | 2016

Design of broadband high-efficiency superconducting-nanowire single photon detectors

Luca Redaelli; Gabriele Bulgarini; Sergiy M. Dobrovolskiy; Sander N. Dorenbos; Val Zwiller; E. Monroy; Jean-Michel Gérard

In this paper several designs to maximize the absorption efficiency of superconducting-nanowire single-photon detectors are investigated. Using a simple optical cavity consisting of a gold mirror and a SiO2 layer, the absorption efficiency can be boosted to over 97%: this result is confirmed experimentally by the realization of an NbTiN-based detector having an overall system detection efficiency of 85% at 1.31 μm. Calculations show that by sandwiching the nanowire between two dielectric Bragg reflectors, unity absorption (>99.9%) could be reached at the peak wavelength for optimized structures. To achieve broadband high efficiency, a different approach is considered: a waveguide-coupled detector. The calculations performed in this work show that, by correctly dimensioning the waveguide and the nanowire, polarization-insensitive detectors absorbing more than 95% of the injected photons over a wavelength range of several hundred nm can be designed. We propose a detector design making use of GaN/AlN waveguides, since these materials allow lattice-matched epitaxial deposition of Nb(Ti)N films and are transparent on a very wide wavelength range.


Optics Express | 2013

Quantum detector tomography of a time-multiplexed superconducting nanowire single-photon detector at telecom wavelengths.

Chandra M. Natarajan; Lijian Zhang; Hendrik B. Coldenstrodt-Ronge; Gaia Donati; Sander N. Dorenbos; Val Zwiller; Ian A. Walmsley; Robert H. Hadfield

Superconducting nanowire single-photon detectors (SNSPDs) are widely used in telecom wavelength optical quantum information science applications. Quantum detector tomography allows the positive-operator-valued measure (POVM) of a single-photon detector to be determined. We use an all-fiber telecom wavelength detector tomography test bed to measure detector characteristics with respect to photon flux and polarization, and hence determine the POVM. We study the SNSPD both as a binary detector and in an 8-bin, fiber based, Time-Multiplexed (TM) configuration at repetition rates up to 4 MHz. The corresponding POVMs provide an accurate picture of the photon number resolving capability of the TM-SNSPD.


Physical Review A | 2012

Measuring the quantum nature of light with a single source and a single detector

Gesine Steudle; Stefan Schietinger; David Höckel; Sander N. Dorenbos; Iman E. Zadeh; Valery Zwiller; Oliver Benson

We realized the most fundamental quantum optical experiment to prove the non-classical character of light: Only a single quantum emitter and a single superconducting nanowire detector were used. A particular appeal of our experiment is its elegance and simplicity. Yet its results unambiguously enforce a quantum theory for light. Previous experiments relied on more complex setups, such as the Hanbury-Brown-Twiss configuration, where a beam splitter directs light to two photodetectors, giving the false impression that the beam splitter is required. Our work results in a major simplification of the widely used photon-correlation techniques with applications ranging from quantum information processing to single-molecule detection.


APL Photonics | 2017

Single-photon detectors combining high efficiency, high detection rates, and ultra-high timing resolution

Iman Esmaeil Zadeh; Johannes W. N. Los; Ronan B. M. Gourgues; Violette Steinmetz; Gabriele Bulgarini; Sergiy M. Dobrovolskiy; Val Zwiller; Sander N. Dorenbos

Single-photon detection with high efficiency, high time resolution, low dark counts, and high photon detection rates is crucial for a wide range of optical measurements. Although efficient detectors have been reported before, combining all performance parameters in a single device remains a challenge. Here, we show a broadband NbTiN superconducting nanowire detector with an efficiency exceeding 92%, over 150 MHz photon detection rate, and a dark count rate below 130 Hz operated in a Gifford-McMahon cryostat. Furthermore, with careful optimization of the detector design and readout electronics, we reach an ultra-low system timing jitter of 14.80 ps (13.95 ps decoupled) while maintaining high detection efficiencies (>75%).


IEEE Transactions on Applied Superconductivity | 2009

HEMT-Based Readout Technique for Dark- and Photon-Count Studies in NbN Superconducting Single-Photon Detectors

J. Kitaygorsky; Sander N. Dorenbos; Elisabeth Reiger; Raymond N. Schouten; Val Zwiller; Roman Sobolewski

Dark counts in superconducting single-photon detectors (SSPDs) manifest themselves as spontaneous, transient voltage pulses, typically indistinguishable from photon counts. We present here a new readout technique based on integrating the SSPD with a low-noise, cryogenic high-electron-mobility transistor (HEMT) with high-input impedance. This arrangement allowed us to achieve amplitude resolution of the recorded output transients. In two-dimensional superconducting nanostripes, the physics of photon counting is based on the hotspot formation mechanism, while the dark counts correspond to voltage transients triggered by the vortex-antivortex motion and/or phase-slip centers. Thus, their respective transients can be distinguished by comparing the output pulse amplitude distributions. Our scheme also allowed us to perform photon-energy-resolution studies by comparing the SSPD output pulse amplitude distributions (the mean pulse amplitude and the distribution width) collected for incident single photons with different energies.

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Val Zwiller

Royal Institute of Technology

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Valery Zwiller

Delft University of Technology

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T. Zijlstra

Delft University of Technology

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Gabriele Bulgarini

Delft University of Technology

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Iman Esmaeil Zadeh

Delft University of Technology

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Burm Baek

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Martin J. Stevens

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Sae Woo Nam

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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