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Atomic-waveguide quantum electrodynamics

Stuart J. Masson, Ana Asenjo-Garcia

2020Physical Review Research80 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Atom arrays are a new type of quantum light-matter interface. Here we propose to employ one-dimensional ordered arrays as atomic waveguides. These arrays support optical guided modes that do not decay into free space. We show that these modes can be harnessed to mediate tunable, long-range interactions between additional "impurity qubits" coupled to the chain, without need for photonic structures. The efficient coupling between qubits and atomic waveguides enables the realization of tunable qubit-qubit interactions, which can be short or long range, dissipative or coherent, as well as chiral. Moreover, owing to the two-level nature of atoms, these waveguides are intrinsically quantum. In contrast to classical waveguides, where photons do not interact with each other, atomic waveguides display strong nonlinearities, which create a tunable dissipative channel for qubit-qubit interactions, and opens the door to the exploration of many-body physics between guided photons. This physics is universal as it only relies on photon interference and can also be observed with other types of quantum emitters, such as those in molecular or solid-state systems.

Topics & Concepts

PhysicsDissipative systemPhotonCavity quantum electrodynamicsQuantum mechanicsCoupling (piping)Realization (probability)QubitQuantumPhotonicsQuantum technologyQuantum entanglementInterference (communication)Atom (system on chip)Quantum opticsQuantum interferenceOpen quantum systemQuantum sensorQuantum networkOptical physicsQuantum informationQuantum dotAtom opticsQuantum computerQuantum electrodynamicsQuantum information scienceQuantum simulatorCold Atom Physics and Bose-Einstein CondensatesMechanical and Optical ResonatorsStrong Light-Matter Interactions
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