Quantum Brain
← Back to papers

Spin-controlled generation of indistinguishable and distinguishable photons from silicon vacancy centres in silicon carbide

N. Morioka, Charles Babin, R. Nagy, Izel Gediz, Erik Hesselmeier, Di Liu, M. Joliffe, Matthias Niethammer, D. Dasari, V. Vorobyov, R. Kolesov, R. Stöhr, Jawad Ul-Hassan, N. T. Son, T. Ohshima, P. Udvarhelyi, G. Thiering, Á. Gali, J. Wrachtrup, F. Kaiser·January 8, 2020·DOI: 10.1038/s41467-020-16330-5
PhysicsMathematicsMedicine

AI Breakdown

Get a structured breakdown of this paper — what it's about, the core idea, and key takeaways for the field.

Abstract

Quantum systems combining indistinguishable photon generation and spin-based quantum information processing are essential for remote quantum applications and networking. However, identification of suitable systems in scalable platforms remains a challenge. Here, we investigate the silicon vacancy centre in silicon carbide and demonstrate controlled emission of indistinguishable and distinguishable photons via coherent spin manipulation. Using strong off-resonant excitation and collecting zero-phonon line photons, we show a two-photon interference contrast close to 90% in Hong-Ou-Mandel type experiments. Further, we exploit the system’s intimate spin-photon relation to spin-control the colour and indistinguishability of consecutively emitted photons. Our results provide a deep insight into the system’s spin-phonon-photon physics and underline the potential of the industrially compatible silicon carbide platform for measurement-based entanglement distribution and photonic cluster state generation. Additional coupling to quantum registers based on individual nuclear spins would further allow for high-level network-relevant quantum information processing, such as error correction and entanglement purification. Defects in silicon carbide can act as single photon sources that also have the benefit of a host material that is already used in electronic devices. Here the authors demonstrate that they can control the distinguishability of the emitted photons by changing the defect spin state.

Related Research

Quantum Intelligence

Ask about quantum research, companies, or market developments.