Cavity-assisted resonance fluorescence from a nitrogen-vacancy center in diamond
Abstract
The nitrogen-vacancy center in diamond, owing to its optically addressable and long-lived electronic spin, is an attractive resource for the generation of remote entangled states. However, the center's low native fraction of coherent photon emission, 3\%, strongly reduces the achievable spin-photon entanglement rates. Here, we couple a nitrogen-vacancy center with a narrow extrinsically broadened linewidth ([159]MHz), hosted in a micron-thin membrane, to the mode of an open optical microcavity. The resulting Purcell factor of 1.8 increases the fraction of zero-phonon line photons to above 44\%, leading to coherent photon emission rates exceeding four times the state of the art under non-resonant excitation. Bolstered by the enhancement provided by the cavity, we for the first time measure resonance fluorescence without any temporal filtering with >10 signal-to-laser background ratio. Our microcavity platform would increase spin-spin entanglement success probabilities by more than an order of magnitude compared to existing implementations. Selective enhancement of the center's zero-phonon transitions could furthermore unlock efficient application of quantum optics techniques such as wave-packet shaping or all-optical spin manipulation.
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