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Dive into the research topics where Ulrich Vogl is active.

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Featured researches published by Ulrich Vogl.


Physical Review Letters | 2012

Stimulated generation of superluminal light pulses via four-wave mixing.

Ryan T. Glasser; Ulrich Vogl; Paul D. Lett

We report on the four-wave mixing of superluminal pulses, in which both the injected and generated pulses involved in the process propagate with negative group velocities. Generated pulses with negative group velocities of up to v(g)=-1/880c are demonstrated, corresponding to the generated pulses peak exiting the 1.7 cm long medium ≈50 ns earlier than if it had propagated at the speed of light in vacuum, c. We also show that in some cases the seeded pulse may propagate with a group velocity larger than c, and that the generated conjugate pulse peak may exit the medium even earlier than the amplified seed pulse peak. We can control the group velocities of the two pulses by changing the seed detuning and the input seed power.


arXiv: Quantum Physics | 2015

Interfacing transitions of different alkali atoms and telecom bands using one narrowband photon pair source

Gerhard Schunk; Ulrich Vogl; Dmitry Strekalov; Michael Förtsch; Florian Sedlmeir; Harald G. L. Schwefel; Manuela Göbelt; Silke Christiansen; Gerd Leuchs; Christoph Marquardt

Quantum information technology strongly relies on coupling of optical photons with narrowband quantum systems, such as quantum dots, color centers, and atomic systems. This coupling requires matching the optical wavelength and bandwidth to the desired system, which presents a considerable problem for most available sources of quantum light. Here we demonstrate coupling of alkali dipole transitions with a tunable source of photon pairs. Our source is based on spontaneous parametric down-conversion in a triply-resonant whispering-gallery mode resonator. For this, we have developed novel wavelength tuning mechanisms, which allow for a coarse tuning to either cesium or rubidium wavelength with subsequent continuous fine-tuning to the desired transition. As a demonstration of the functionality of the source, we performed a heralded single photon measurement of the atomic decay. We present a major advance in controlling the spontaneous down-conversion process, which makes our bright source of single photons now compatible with a plethora of narrow-band resonant systems.


Optics Express | 2014

Identifying modes of large whispering-gallery mode resonators from the spectrum and emission pattern

Gerhard Schunk; Josef U. Fürst; Michael Förtsch; Dmitry Strekalov; Ulrich Vogl; Florian Sedlmeir; Harald G. L. Schwefel; Gerd Leuchs; Christoph Marquardt

Identifying the mode numbers in whispering-gallery mode resonators (WGMRs) is important for tailoring them to experimental needs. Here we report on a novel experimental mode analysis technique based on the combination of frequency analysis and far-field imaging for high mode numbers of large WGMRs. The radial mode numbers q and the angular mode numbers p = ℓ-m are identified and labeled via far-field imaging. The polar mode numbers ℓ are determined unambiguously by fitting the frequency differences between individual whispering gallery modes (WGMs). This allows for the accurate determination of the geometry and the refractive index at different temperatures of the WGMR. For future applications in classical and quantum optics, this mode analysis enables one to control the narrow-band phase-matching conditions in nonlinear processes such as second-harmonic generation or parametric down-conversion.


arXiv: Quantum Physics | 2016

Efficient microwave to optical photon conversion: an electro-optical realization

Alfredo Rueda; Florian Sedlmeir; Michele C. Collodo; Ulrich Vogl; Birgit Stiller; Gerhard Schunk; Dmitry Strekalov; Christoph Marquardt; J. M. Fink; Oskar Painter; Gerd Leuchs; Harald G. L. Schwefel

Alfredo Rueda, Florian Sedlmeir1,2,3,+,∗, Michele C. Collodo, Ulrich Vogl, Birgit Stiller, Gerhard Schunk, Dmitry V. Strekalov, Christoph Marquardt, Johannes M. Fink, Oskar Painter, Gerd Leuchs, and Harald G. L. Schwefel8,∗ Max Planck Institute for the Science of Light, Günther-Scharowsky-Straße 1/Building 24, 90158 Erlangen, Germany Institute for Optics, Information and Photonics, University Erlangen-Nürnberg, Staudtstr. 7/B2, 91058 Erlangen, Germany SAOT, School in Advanced Optical Technologies, Paul-Gordan-Str. 6, 91052 Erlangen, Germany Institute for Quantum Information and Matter and Thomas J. Watson, Sr., Laboratory of Applied Physics, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California 91125, USA currently at: Department of Physics, ETH Zürich, CH-8093 Zurich, Switzerland currently at: Centre for Ultrahigh bandwidth Devices for Optical Systems (CUDOS), School of Physics, University of Sydney, New South Wales 2006, Australia currently at: Institute of Science and Technology Austria, 3400 Klosterneuburg, Austria Department of Physics, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand ∗Corresponding authors: [email protected], [email protected] and these authors contributed equally to this workLinking classical microwave electrical circuits to the optical telecommunication band is at the core of modern communication. Future quantum information networks will require coherent microwave-to-optical conversion to link electronic quantum processors and memories via low-loss optical telecommunication networks. Efficient conversion can be achieved with electro-optical modulators operating at the single microwave photon level. In the standard electro-optic modulation scheme, this is impossible because both up- and down-converted sidebands are necessarily present. Here, we demonstrate true single-sideband up- or down-conversion in a triply resonant whispering gallery mode resonator by explicitly addressing modes with asymmetric free spectral range. Compared to previous experiments, we show a 3 orders of magnitude improvement of the electro-optical conversion efficiency, reaching 0.1% photon number conversion for a 10 GHz microwave tone at 0.42 mW of optical pump power. The presented scheme is fully compatible with existing superconducting 3D circuit quantum electrodynamics technology and can be used for nonclassical state conversion and communication. Our conversion bandwidth is larger than 1 MHz and is not fundamentally limited.


Physical Review A | 2012

Advanced Detection of Information in Optical Pulses with Negative Group Velocity

Ulrich Vogl; Ryan T. Glasser; Paul D. Lett

In this letter we experimentally demonstrate that the signal velocity, defined as the earliest time when a signal is detected above the realistic noise floor, may be altered by a region of anomalous dispersion. We encode information in the spatial degree of freedom of an optical pulse so that the imprinted information is not limited by the frequency bandwidth of the region of anomalous dispersion. We then show that the combination of superluminal pulse propagation and realistic detectors with non-ideal quantum efficiency leads to a speed-up of the earliest experimentally obtainable arrival time of the transmitted signal even with the overall pulse experiencing unity gain. This speed-up is reliant upon non-ideal detectors and losses, as perfect detection efficiency would result in the speed of information being equal to the speed of light in vacuum, regardless of the group velocity of the optical pulses.


Nature Photonics | 2014

Quantum mutual information of an entangled state propagating through a fast-light medium

Jeremy B. Clark; Ryan T. Glasser; Quentin Glorieux; Ulrich Vogl; Tian Li; Kevin M. Jones; Paul D. Lett

The long-standing question of information velocity in slow- and fast-light media is investigated by measuring the propagation time of random and correlated noise. The mutual information shared between two modes of an entangled state of light was found to advance when one mode propagates through the fast-light medium.


Physical Review A | 2013

Experimental characterization of Gaussian quantum discord generated by four-wave mixing

Ulrich Vogl; Ryan T. Glasser; Quentin Glorieux; Jeremy B. Clark; Neil Corzo; Paul D. Lett

We experimentally determine the quantum discord present in two-mode squeezed vacuum generated by a four-wave mixing process in hot rubidium vapor. The frequency spectra of the discord, as well as the quantum and classical mutual information are also measured. In addition, the effects of symmetric attenuation introduced into both modes of the squeezed vacuum on the discord, the quantum mutual information and the classical correlations are examined experimentally. Finally, we show that due to the multi-spatial-mode nature of the four-wave mixing process, the quantum discord may exhibit sub- or superadditivity depending on which spatial channels are selected.


Optics Express | 2012

Demonstration of images with negative group velocities

Ryan T. Glasser; Ulrich Vogl; Paul D. Lett

We report the experimental demonstration of the superluminal propagation of multi-spatial-mode images via four-wave mixing in hot atomic vapor, in which all spatial sub-regions propagate with negative group velocities. We investigate the spatial mode properties and temporal reshaping of the fast light images, and show large relative pulse peak advancements of up to 64 % of the input pulse width. The degree of temporal reshaping is quantified and increases as the relative pulse peak advancement increases. When optimized for image quality or pulse advancement, negative group velocities of up to v(g)=-c/880 and v(g)=-c/2180, respectively, are demonstrated when integrating temporally over the entire image. The present results are applicable to temporal cloaking devices that require strong manipulation of the dispersion relation, where one can envision temporally cloaking various spatial regions of an image for different durations. Additionally, the modes involved in a four-wave mixing process similar to the present experiment have been shown to exhibit quantum correlations and entanglement. The results presented here provide insight into how to tailor experimental tests of the behavior of these quantum correlations and entanglement in the superluminal regime.


Journal of Modern Optics | 2011

Collisional redistribution laser cooling of a high-pressure atomic gas

Ulrich Vogl; Anne Saβ; Simon Haβelmann; Martin Weitz

We describe measurements demonstrating laser cooling of an atomic gas by means of collisional redistribution of radiation. The experiment uses rubidium atoms in the presence of several hundred bar of argon buffer gas pressure. Frequent collisions in the dense gas transiently shift a far-red detuned optical field into resonance, while spontaneous emission occurs close to the unperturbed atomic transition frequency. Evidence for the cooling is obtained via both thermographic imaging and thermographic deflection spectroscopy. The cooled gas has a density above 1021 atoms/cm3, yielding evidence for the laser cooling of a macroscopic ensemble of gas atoms.


New Journal of Physics | 2014

Advanced quantum noise correlations

Ulrich Vogl; Ryan T. Glasser; Jeremy B. Clark; Quentin Glorieux; Tian Li; Neil Corzo; Paul D. Lett

We use the quantum correlations of twin-beams of light to probe the added noise when one of the beams propagates through a medium with anomalous dispersion. The experiment is based on two successive four-wave mixing processes in rubidium vapor, which allow for the generation of bright two-mode-squeezed twin-beams followed by a controlled advancement while maintaining the shared quantum-correlations between the beams. The demonstrated effect allows the study of irreversible decoherence in a medium exhibiting anomalous dispersion, and for the first time shows the advancement of a bright nonclassical state of light. The advancement and corresponding degradation of the quantum correlations are found to be operating near the fundamental quantum limit imposed by using a phase-insensitive amplifier.

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Ryan T. Glasser

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Paul D. Lett

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Jeremy B. Clark

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Quentin Glorieux

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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