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Optically addressable spins in the solid state are promising candidates for realizations of quantum networks and quantum computing nodes.

Wann?

09. Mai 2025, 14:00-15:30

Wo?

ZKS-Uhrturmhörsaal
S2|08, Raum 171
Hochschulstraße 4
64289 Darmstadt

ZKS-Uhrturmhörsaal , S2|08, Raum 171 , Hochschulstraße 4 , 64289 Darmstadt

Veranstalter

Fachbereich Physik

As one material platform, we study color centers in diamond, such as the tin-vacancy (SnV) center, which offers advantageous optical coherence properties. We observe long-term spectral stability and Fourier-limited emission linewidths of individual emitters. We investigate their spin degree of freedom and demonstrate coherent manipulation of the centers’ electron spin [1]. We furthermore identify strongly coupled neighboring nuclear spins and achieve nuclear spin state preparation and coherent control. Finally, we integrate a thin diamond membrane into a microcavity for efficient spin-photon interfacing and observe Purcell-enhanced emission and cooperative coupling [2,3]. Together, these steps combine the key requirements for an efficient spin-photon interface as required for the applications mentioned above.

A complementary platform is rare earth ion-based materials. I will report investigations of molecular rare-earth-complexes with promising coherence properties for quantum applications [4] and efforts to study single ions coupled to a cavity as qubits [5,6]. 

References
[1] Karapatzakis et al., Phys Rev X 14, 031036 (2024)
[2] Pallmann et al., Phys Rev X 14, 041055 (2024)
[3] Körber et al., Phys Rev Appl. 19, 064057 (2023)
[4] Serrano et al., Nature 603, 241 (2022)
[5] Eichhorn et al., Nanophotonics doi:10.1515/nanoph-2024-0721 (2025)
[6] Deshmukh et al., Optica 10, 1339 (2023)

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Tags

Physikalisches Kolloquium