Single-Photon Transistor Using a Förster Resonance
Abstract
An all-optical transistor is a device in which a gate light pulse switches the transmission of a target light pulse with a gain above unity. The gain quantifies the change of the transmitted target photon number per incoming gate photon. We study the quantum limit of one incoming gate photon and observe a gain of 20. The gate pulse is stored as a Rydberg excitation in an ultracold gas. The transmission of the subsequent target pulse is suppressed by Rydberg blockade, which is enhanced by a Förster resonance. The detected target photons reveal in a single shot with a fidelity above 0.86 whether a Rydberg excitation was created during the gate pulse. The gain offers the possibility to distribute the transistor output to the inputs of many transistors, thus making complex computational tasks possible.
- Publication:
-
Physical Review Letters
- Pub Date:
- August 2014
- DOI:
- 10.1103/PhysRevLett.113.053602
- Bibcode:
- 2014PhRvL.113e3602T
- Keywords:
-
- 42.50.Gy;
- 32.80.Ee;
- 42.79.Ta;
- 67.85.-d;
- Effects of atomic coherence on propagation absorption and amplification of light;
- electromagnetically induced transparency and absorption;
- Rydberg states;
- Optical computers logic elements interconnects switches;
- neural networks;
- Ultracold gases trapped gases