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Quantum detector tomography of ultrafast nanophotonic parametric amplifiers single photon detector

ORAL

Abstract

Integrated photonic quantum information processing (QIP) has advanced rapidly due to progress in various nanophotonic platforms. Single photon detectors have been the subject of intense study due to their ubiquity in QIP systems, yet many state-of-the art detectors operate at cryogenic temperatures under vacuum and suffer from long dead times. We propose and demonstrate a single photon detection scheme based on optical parametric amplification in nanophotonic lithium niobate (LN) combined with a classical photodetector. We use quantum detector tomography and experimentally demonstrate an efficiency of 26.5% with a 2.2% dark count rate. We show that by improving the nonlinearity-to-loss ratio in nanophotonics and using homodyne detection on a squeezed pump, the detector can achieve 69% efficiency with 0.9% dark count rate. The detector operates at room temperature, has no intrinsic dead time, and is readily integrated in LN nanophotonics, in which many other components of photonic QIP are available. Our results represent a step towards all-optical ultrafast photon detection for scalable nanophotonic QIP.

Publication: "Ultrafast single-photon detection using nanophotonic parametric amplifiers" arXiv:2410.18397.<br>

Presenters

  • Elina Sendonaris

    California Institute of Technology

Authors

  • Elina Sendonaris

    California Institute of Technology

  • James Williams

    California Institute of Technology

  • Rajveer Nehra

    Univ of Virginia

  • Robert Gray

    California Institute of Technology

  • Ryoto Sekine

    PINC Technologies, Inc.

  • Luis Ledezma

    PINC Technologies, Inc.

  • Alireza Marandi

    California Institute of Technology