Litcius/Paper detail

One-hour coherent optical storage in an atomic frequency comb memory

Yu Ma, You-Zhi Ma, Zong-Quan Zhou, Chuan-Feng Li, Guang-Can Guo

2021Nature Communications206 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Photon loss in optical fibers prevents long-distance distribution of quantum information on the ground. Quantum repeater is proposed to overcome this problem, but the communication distance is still limited so far because of the system complexity of the quantum repeater scheme. Alternative solutions include transportable quantum memory and quantum-memory-equipped satellites, where long-lived optical quantum memories are the key components to realize global quantum communication. However, the longest storage time of the optical memories demonstrated so far is approximately 1 minute. Here, by employing a zero-first-order-Zeeman magnetic field and dynamical decoupling to protect the spin coherence in a solid, we demonstrate coherent storage of light in an atomic frequency comb memory over 1 hour, leading to a promising future for large-scale quantum communication based on long-lived solid-state quantum memories.

Topics & Concepts

PhysicsQuantum sensorQuantum information scienceRepeater (horology)Quantum networkQuantum key distributionCoherence (philosophical gambling strategy)QuantumQuantum informationQuantum imagingOptoelectronicsQuantum memoryPhotonComputer data storageOptical storageOptical communicationFrequency combQuantum computerQuantum technologyQuantum opticsOptical fiberQuantum channelCoherence timeOptics3D optical data storageQubitQuantum mechanicsDecoupling (probability)Quantum optics and atomic interactionsMechanical and Optical ResonatorsQuantum Information and Cryptography