Abstract
Entangling a single spin to the polarization of a single incoming photon, generated by an external source, would open new paradigms in quantum optics such as delayed-photon entanglement, deterministic logic gates or fault-tolerant quantum computing. These perspectives rely on the possibility that a single spin induces a macroscopic rotation of a photon polarization. Such polarization rotations induced by single spins were recently observed, yet limited to a few 10-3 degrees due to poor spin-photon coupling. Here we report the enhancement by three orders of magnitude of the spin-photon interaction, using a cavity quantum electrodynamics device. A single hole spin in a semiconductor quantum dot is deterministically coupled to a micropillar cavity. The cavity-enhanced coupling between the incoming photons and the solid-state spin results in a polarization rotation by ±6° when the spin is optically initialized in the up or down state. These results open the way towards a spin-based quantum network. & copy; 2015 Macmillan Publishers Limited. All rights reserved.
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CITATION STYLE
Arnold, C., Demory, J., Loo, V., Lemaître, A., Sagnes, I., Glazov, M., … Lanco, L. (2015). Macroscopic rotation of photon polarization induced by a single spin. Nature Communications, 6. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms7236
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