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Sources of single photons are key elements in the study of basic quantum optical concepts and applications in quantum information science. Among the different sources available, semiconductor quantum dots excel with their straight forward integrability in semiconductor based on-chip solutions and the potential that photon emission can be triggered on demand. Usually, the photon emission event is part of a cascaded biexciton-exciton emission scheme. Important properties of the emitted photon such as polarization and time of emission are either probabilistic in nature or pre-determined by electronic properties of the system. In this work, we study the direct two-photon emission from the biexciton. We show that emission through this higher-order transition provides a much more versatile approach to generate a single photon. In the scheme we propose, the two-photon emission from the biexciton is enabled by a laser field (or laser pulse) driving the system into a virtual state inside the band gap. From this intermediate virtual state, the single photon of interest is then spontaneously emitted. Its properties are determined by the driving laser pulse, enabling all-optical on-the-fly control of polarization state, frequency, and time of emission of the photon.
The amplitude and phase of a materials nonlinear optical response provide insight into the underlying electronic dynamics that determine its optical properties. Phase-sensitive nonlinear spectroscopy techniques are widely implemented to explore these
Scalable quantum photonic architectures demand highly efficient, high-purity single-photon sources, which can be frequency matched via external tuning. We demonstrate a single-photon source based on an InAs quantum dot embedded in a micropillar reson
We use the third- and fourth-order autocorrelation functions $g^{(3)}(tau_1,tau_2)$ and $g^{(4)}(tau_1,tau_2, tau_3)$ to detect the non-classical character of the light transmitted through a photonic-crystal nanocavity containing a strongly-coupled q
Quantum dots in cavities have been shown to be very bright sources of indistinguishable single photons. Yet the quantum interference between two bright quantum dot sources, a critical step for photon based quantum computation, has never been investig
Planar nanostructures allow near-ideal extraction of emission from a quantum emitter embedded within, thereby realizing deterministic single-photon sources. Such a source can be transformed into M single-photon sources by implementing active temporal