Cavity-enhanced coherent light scattering from a quantum dot.
Anthony J BennettJames P LeeDavid J P EllisThomas MeanyEoin MurrayFrederik F FloetherJonathan P GriffthsIan FarrerDavid A RitchieAndrew J ShieldsPublished in: Science advances (2016)
The generation of coherent and indistinguishable single photons is a critical step for photonic quantum technologies in information processing and metrology. A promising system is the resonant optical excitation of solid-state emitters embedded in wavelength-scale three-dimensional cavities. However, the challenge here is to reject the unwanted excitation to a level below the quantum signal. We demonstrate this using coherent photon scattering from a quantum dot in a micropillar. The cavity is shown to enhance the fraction of light that is resonantly scattered toward unity, generating antibunched indistinguishable photons that are 16 times narrower than the time-bandwidth limit, even when the transition is near saturation. Finally, deterministic excitation is used to create two-photon N00N states with which we make superresolving phase measurements in a photonic circuit.