Takesue H, Nam SW, Zhang Q, Hadfield RH, Honjo T, Tamaki K, et al. Quantum key distribution over a 40-dB channel loss using superconducting single-photon detectors. Nat Photon. 2007;1:343–8.
|
Schwarz B. Lidar: Mapping the world in 3D. Nat Photon. 2010;4(7):429–30.
Abstract: A high-definition LIDAR system with a rotating sensor head containing 64 semiconductor lasers allows the efficient generation of 3D environment maps at unprecedented levels of detail.
|
Schmidt MA. Integration: Fibres embrace optoelectronics. Nat Photon. 2012;6(3):143–5.
Abstract: The demonstration of an in-fibre semiconductor photodetector with gigahertz bandwidth bodes well for the future development of hybrid fibre optoelectronics.
|
Santori C, Beausoleil RG. Quantum memory: Phonons in diamond crystals. Nat Photon. 2012;6:10–2.
Abstract: The demonstration that quantum information can be stored in a bulk-diamond crystal in the form of an optically excited phonon gives researchers a new type of mechanical solid-state quantum memory to explore.
|
Pris AD, Utturkar Y, Surman C, Morris WG, Vert A, Zalyubovskiy S, et al. Towards high-speed imaging of infrared photons with bio-inspired nanoarchitectures. Nat Photon. 2012;6(3):195–200.
Abstract: Existing infrared detectors rely on complex microfabrication and thermal management methods. Here, we report an attractive platform of low-thermal-mass resonators inspired by the architectures of iridescent Morpho butterfly scales. In these resonators, the optical cavity is modulated by its thermal expansion and refractive index change, resulting in `wavelength conversion' of mid-wave infrared (3-8 µm) radiation into visible iridescence changes. By doping Morpho butterfly scales with single-walled carbon nanotubes, we achieved mid-wave infrared detection with 18-62 mK noise-equivalent temperature difference and 35-40 Hz heat-sink-free response speed. The nanoscale pitch and the extremely small thermal mass of individual `pixels' promise significant improvements over existing detectors. Computational analysis explains the origin of this thermal response and guides future conceptually new bio-inspired thermal imaging sensor designs.
|