Abstract

The nitrogen-vacancy center in diamond is an attractive resource for the generation of remote entangled states owing to its optically addressable and long-lived electronic spin. However, its low native fraction of coherent photon emission, ~3%, undermines the achievable spin-photon entanglement rates. Here, we couple a nitrogen-vacancy center with a narrow extrinsically-broadened linewidth (159 MHz), hosted in a micron-thin membrane, to an open microcavity. The resulting Purcell factor of ~1.8 increases the zero-phonon line fraction to over 44%. Operation in the Purcell regime, together with an efficient collection of the zero-phonon-line photons, allows resonance fluorescence to be detected for the first time without any temporal filtering. We achieve a >10 signal-to-laser background ratio. This selective enhancement of the center’s zero-phonon transitions could increase spin-spin entanglement success probabilities beyond an order of magnitude compared to state-of-the-art implementations, and enable powerful quantum optics techniques such as wave-packet shaping or all-optical spin manipulation.

Details

Title
Cavity-assisted resonance fluorescence from a nitrogen-vacancy center in diamond
Author
Yurgens, Viktoria 1   VIAFID ORCID Logo  ; Fontana, Yannik 1   VIAFID ORCID Logo  ; Corazza, Andrea 1 ; Shields, Brendan J. 2 ; Maletinsky, Patrick 1   VIAFID ORCID Logo  ; Warburton, Richard J. 1   VIAFID ORCID Logo 

 University of Basel, Department of Physics, Basel, Switzerland (GRID:grid.6612.3) (ISNI:0000 0004 1937 0642) 
 University of Basel, Department of Physics, Basel, Switzerland (GRID:grid.6612.3) (ISNI:0000 0004 1937 0642); Quantum Network Technologies, Boston, USA (GRID:grid.417447.5) 
Pages
112
Publication year
2024
Publication date
2024
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
e-ISSN
20566387
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
3125879862
Copyright
© The Author(s) 2024. This work is published under http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ (the “License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.