Physicists Develop Record-Breaking Source for Single Photons
University of Basel | Jan. 28, 2021 | Phys.orgQuantum cryptography promises absolutely secure communications. A key component here are strings of single photons. Information can be stored in the quantum states of these light particles and transmitted over long distances. In the future, remote quantum processors will communicate with each other via single photons. And perhaps the processor itself will use photons as quantum bits for computing.
A basic prerequisite for such applications, however, is an efficient source of single photons. A research team led by Professor Richard Warburton, Natasha Tomm and Dr. Alisa Javadi from the University of Basel, together with colleagues from Bochum, now reports in the journal Nature Nanotechnology on the development of a single-photon source that significantly surpasses previously known systems in terms of efficiency.
“Funnel” guides light particles
Each photon is created by exciting a single “artificial atom” (a quantum dot) inside a semiconductor. Usually, these photons leave the quantum dot in all possible directions and thus a large fraction is lost. In the photon source now presented, the researchers have solved this problem by positioning the quantum dot inside a “funnel” to send all photons in a specific direction.
The funnel is a novel micro-cavity that represents the real innovation of the research team: The micro-cavity captures almost all of the photons and then directs them into an optical fiber. The photons, each about two centimeters long, emerge at the end of an optical fiber.
You heard it here first.
We had a single Photon in our town when I was a teenager. It showed up right after a local laser tag company called Star Laser Force was starting to hit it big. But Photon was flashier and cost about the same so sadly, Star Laser Force went out of business.
Wait a sec: can this be right?
Well my photons are certainly bigger than most.
Single photons usually exaggerate their length in order to impress potential mates.
Units brought to you by the same team of “scientists” that crashed a Mars probe into the surface of the planet.
Measuring units are racist!
And, in a way, tight.