Demonstration of a memory for tightly guided light in an optical nanofiber.

We report the experimental observation of slow-light and coherent storage in a setting where light is tightly confined in the transverse directions. By interfacing a tapered optical nanofiber with a cold atomic ensemble, electromagnetically induced transparency is observed and light pulses at the single-photon level are stored in and retrieved from the atomic medium. The decay of efficiency with storage time is also measured and related to concurrent decoherence mechanisms. Collapses and revivals can be additionally controlled by an applied magnetic field. Our results based on subdiffraction-limited optical mode interacting with atoms via the strong evanescent field demonstrate an alternative to free-space focusing and a novel capability for information storage in an all-fibered quantum network.

[1]  K. S. Choi Coherent control of entanglement with atomic ensembles , 2011 .

[2]  Zach DeVito,et al.  Opt , 2017 .

[3]  A. Levine,et al.  New estimates of the storage permanence and ocean co-benefits of enhanced rock weathering , 2023, PNAS nexus.

[4]  R. Rosenfeld Nature , 2009, Otolaryngology--head and neck surgery : official journal of American Academy of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery.