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Dive into the research topics where T. Chaneliere is active.

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Featured researches published by T. Chaneliere.


Nature | 2005

Storage and retrieval of single photons transmitted between remote quantum memories

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

An elementary quantum network operation involves storing a qubit state in an atomic quantum memory node, and then retrieving and transporting the information through a single photon excitation to a remote quantum memory node for further storage or analysis. Implementations of quantum network operations are thus conditioned on the ability to realize matter-to-light and/or light-to-matter quantum state mappings. Here we report the generation, transmission, storage and retrieval of single quanta using two remote atomic ensembles. A single photon is generated from a cold atomic ensemble at one site , and is directed to another site through 100 metres of optical fibre. The photon is then converted into a single collective atomic excitation using a dark-state polariton approach. After a programmable storage time, the atomic excitation is converted back into a single photon. This is demonstrated experimentally, for a storage time of 0.5 microseconds, by measurement of an anti-correlation parameter. Storage times exceeding ten microseconds are observed by intensity cross-correlation measurements. This storage period is two orders of magnitude longer than the time required to achieve conversion between photonic and atomic quanta. The controlled transfer of single quanta between remote quantum memories constitutes an important step towards distributed quantum networks.


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 | 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.


New Journal of Physics | 2011

Highly multimode storage in a crystal

M Bonarota; J-L Le Gouët; T. Chaneliere

We experimentally demonstrate the storage of 1060 temporal modes onto a thulium-doped crystal using an atomic frequency comb (AFC). The comb covers 0.93?GHz defining the storage bandwidth. As compared to previous AFC preparation methods (pulse sequences, i.e. amplitude modulation), we only use frequency modulation to produce the desired optical pumping spectrum. To ensure an accurate spectrally selective optical pumping, the frequency-modulated laser is self-locked on the atomic comb. Our approach is general and should be applicable to a wide range of rare-earth-doped materials in the context of multimode quantum memory.


New Journal of Physics | 2011

Revival of silenced echo and quantum memory for light

Vianney Damon; M Bonarota; Anne Louchet-Chauvet; T. Chaneliere; J-L Le Gouët

We propose an original quantum memory protocol. It belongs to the class of rephasing processes and is closely related to two-pulse photon echo. It is known that the strong population inversion produced by the rephasing pulse prevents the plain two-pulse photon echo from serving as a quantum memory scheme. Indeed, gain and spontaneous emission generate prohibitive noise. A second π-pulse can be used to simultaneously reverse the atomic phase and bring the atoms back into the ground state. Then a secondary echo is radiated from a non-inverted medium, avoiding contamination by gain and spontaneous emission noise. However, one must kill the primary echo, in order to preserve all the information for the secondary signal. In the present work, spatial phase mismatching is used to silence the standard two-pulse echo. An experimental demonstration is presented.


New Journal of Physics | 2010

Efficient light storage in a crystal using an atomic frequency comb

T. Chaneliere; J. Ruggiero; M Bonarota; Mikael Afzelius; J-L Le Gouët

We demonstrate efficient and reversible mapping of a light field on to a thulium-doped crystal using an atomic frequency comb (AFC). Owing to an accurate spectral preparation of the sample, we reach an efficiency of nine per cent. Our interpretation of the data is based on an original spectral analysis of the AFC. By independently measuring the absorption spectrum, we show that the efficiency is limited by both the available optical thickness and the preparation procedure at large absorption depth for a given bandwidth. The experiment is repeated with less than one photon per pulse and single-photon counting detectors. We clearly observe that the AFC protocol is compatible with the noise level required for weak quantum field storage.


Physical Review A | 2009

Why the two-pulse photon echo is not a good quantum memory protocol

J. Ruggiero; Jean-Louis Le Gouët; Christoph Simon; T. Chaneliere

We consider in this paper a two-pulse photon echo sequence in the prospect of quantum light storage. We analyze the conditions where quantum storage could be realistically performed. We simply and analytically calculate the efficiency in that limit, and clarify the role of the exactly {pi}-rephasing pulse in the sequence. Our physical interpretation of the process is well supported by its experimental implementation in a Tm{sup 3+}:yttrium aluminum garnet crystal thanks to an accurate control of the rephasing pulse area. We finally address independently the fundamental limitations of the quantum fidelity. Our work allows us to point out on one side the real drawbacks of this scheme for quantum storage and on the other side its specificities which can be a source of inspiration to conceive more promising procedures with rare-earth ion doped crystals.


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.

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J.-L. Le Gouët

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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A. Kuzmich

Georgia Institute of Technology

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S. D. Jenkins

Georgia Institute of Technology

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Dzmitry Matsukevich

Georgia Institute of Technology

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Jean-Louis Le Gouët

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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T. A. B. Kennedy

Georgia Institute of Technology

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Shau-Yu Lan

Georgia Institute of Technology

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Anne Louchet-Chauvet

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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I. Lorgeré

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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