270 research outputs found
Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen - entangled motion of two massive objects
In 1935, Einstein, Podolsky and Rosen (EPR) considered two particles in an
entangled state of motion to illustrate why they questioned the completeness of
quantum theory. In the past decades, microscopic systems with entanglement in
various degrees of freedom have successfully been generated, representing
compelling evidence to support the completeness of quantum theory. Today, the
generation of an EPR-entangled state of motion of two massive objects of up to
the kilogram-scale seems feasible with state-of-the-art technology. Recently,
the generation and verification of EPR-entangled mirror motion in
interferometric gravitational wave detectors was proposed, with the aim of
testing quantum theory in the regime of macroscopic objects, and to make
available nonclassical probe systems for future tests of modified quantum
theories that include (non-relativistic) gravity. The work presented here
builds on these earlier results and proposes a specific Michelson
interferometer that includes two high-quality laser mirrors of about 0.1 kg
mass each. The mirrors are individually suspended as pendula and located close
to each other, and cooled to about 4 K. The physical concepts for the
generation of the EPR-entangled centre of mass motion of these two mirrors are
described. Apart from a test of quantum mechanics in the macroscopic world, the
setup is envisioned to test predictions of yet-to-be-elaborated modified
quantum theories that include gravitational effects
Sensitivity improvement of a laser interferometer limited by inelastic back-scattering, employing dual readout
Inelastic back-scattering of stray light is a long-standing and fundamental
problem in high-sensitivity interferometric measurements and a potential
limitation for advanced gravitational-wave detectors. The emerging parasitic
interferences cannot be distinguished from a scientific signal via conventional
single readout. In this work, we propose the subtraction of inelastic
back-scatter signals by employing dual homodyne detection on the output light,
and demonstrate it for a table-top Michelson interferometer. The additional
readout contains solely parasitic signals and is used to model the scatter
source. Subtraction of the scatter signal reduces the noise spectral density
and thus improves the measurement sensitivity. Our scheme is qualitatively
different from the previously demonstrated vetoing of scatter signals and opens
a new path for improving the sensitivity of future gravitational-wave detectors
and other back-scatter limited devices
Stable control of 10 dB two-mode squeezed vacuum states of light
Continuous variable entanglement is a fundamental resource for many quantum
information tasks. Important protocols like superactivation of zero-capacity
channels and finite-size quantum cryptography that provides security against
most general attacks, require about 10 dB two-mode squeezing. Additionally,
stable phase control mechanisms are necessary but are difficult to achieve
because the total amount of optical loss to the entangled beams needs to be
small. Here, we experimentally demonstrate a control scheme for two-mode
squeezed vacuum states at the telecommunication wavelength of 1550 nm. Our
states exhibited an Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen covariance product of 0.0309 \pm
0.0002, where 1 is the critical value, and a Duan inseparability value of 0.360
\pm 0.001, where 4 is the critical value. The latter corresponds to 10.45 \pm
0.01 dB which reflects the average non-classical noise suppression of the two
squeezed vacuum states used to generate the entanglement. With the results of
this work demanding quantum information protocols will become feasible.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figure
Reduction of Classical Measurement Noise via Quantum-Dense Metrology
Quantum-dense metrology (QDM) constitutes a special case of quantum metrology
in which two orthogonal phase space projections of a signal are simultaneously
sensed beyond the shot noise limit. Previously it was shown that the additional
sensing channel that is provided by QDM contains information that can be used
to identify and to discard corrupted segments from the measurement data. Here,
we demonstrate a proof-of-principle experiment in which this information is
used for improving the sensitivity without discarding any measurement segments.
Our measurement reached sub-shot-noise performance although initially strong
classical noise polluted the data
A graphical description of optical parametric generation of squeezed states of light
The standard process for the production of strongly squeezed states of light
is optical parametric amplification (OPA) below threshold in dielectric media
such as LiNbO3 or periodically poled KTP. Here, we present a graphical
description of squeezed light generation via OPA. It visualizes the interaction
between the nonlinear dielectric polarization of the medium and the
electromagnetic quantum field. We explicitly focus on the transfer from the
field's ground state to a squeezed vacuum state and from a coherent state to a
bright squeezed state by the medium's secondorder nonlinearity, respectively.
Our pictures visualize the phase dependent amplification and deamplification of
quantum uncertainties and give the phase relations between all propagating
electro-magnetic fields as well as the internally induced dielectric
polarizations. The graphical description can also be used to describe the
generation of nonclassical states of light via higherorder effects of the
non-linear dielectric polarization such as four-wave mixing and the optical
Kerr effect
Optical Absorption Measurement at 1550 nm on a Highly-Reflective Si/SiO Coating Stack
Future laser-interferometric gravitational wave detectors (GWDs) will
potentially employ test mass mirrors from crystalline silicon and a laser
wavelength of , which corresponds to a photon energy below the
silicon bandgap. Silicon might also be an attractive high-refractive index
material for the dielectric mirror coatings. Films of amorphous silicon (a-Si),
however, have been found to be significantly more absorptive at
than crystalline silicon (c-Si). Here, we investigate the optical absorption of
a Si/SiO dielectric coating produced with the ion plating technique. The
ion plating technique is distinct from the standard state-of-the-art ion beam
sputtering technique since it uses a higher processing temperature of about
250C, higher particle energies, and generally results in higher
refractive indices of the deposited films. Our coating stack was fabricated for
a reflectivity of for s-polarized light at and
for an angle of incidence of 44. We used the photothermal self-phase
modulation technique to measure the coating absorption in s-polarization and
p-polarization. We obtained and
. These results correspond to an
absorption coefficient which is lower than literature values for a-Si which
vary from up to . It is, however, still orders
of magnitude higher than expected for c-Si and thus still too high for GWD
applications
High-bandwidth squeezed light at 1550 nm from a compact monolithic PPKTP cavity
We report the generation of squeezed vacuum states of light at 1550 nm with a
broadband quantum noise reduction of up to 4.8 dB ranging from 5 MHz to 1.2 GHz
sideband frequency. We used a custom-designed 2.6 mm long biconvex
periodically-poled potassium titanyl phosphate (PPKTP) crystal. It featured
reflectively coated end surfaces, 2.26 GHz of linewidth and generated the
squeezing via optical parametric amplification. Two homodyne detectors with
different quantum efficiencies and bandwidths were used to characterize the
non-classical noise suppression. We measured squeezing values of up to 4.8 dB
from 5 to 100 MHz and up to 3 dB from 100 MHz to 1.2 GHz. The squeezed vacuum
measurements were limited by detection loss. We propose an improved detection
scheme to measure up to 10 dB squeezing over 1 GHz. Our results of GHz
bandwidth squeezed light generation provide new prospects for high-speed
quantum key distribution.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figure
Negative Wigner function at telecommunication wavelength from homodyne detection
Quantum states of light having a Wigner function with negative values
represent a key resource in quantum communication and quantum information
processing. Here, we present the generation of such a state at the
telecommunication wavelength of 1550nm. The state is generated by means of
photon subtraction from a weakly squeezed vacuum state and is heralded by the
`click' of a single photon counter. Balanced homodyne detection is applied to
reconstruct the Wigner function, also yielding the state's photon number
distribution. The heralding photons are frequency up-converted to 532nm to
allow for the use of a room-temperature (silicon) avalanche photo diode. The
Wigner function reads W(0,0)=-0.063 +/- 0.004 at the origin of phase space,
which certifies negativity with more than 15 standard deviations
Neutrino decoupling and the transition to cold dark matter
About 40 years ago, the neutrino was ruled out as the dark matter particle
based on several arguments. Here I use the well-established concept of quantum
uncertainties of position and momentum to describe the decoupling of neutrinos
from the primordial plasma, which took place about half a second after the Big
Bang. In this way I show that the main arguments against the neutrino are
either wrong or have loopholes, and conclude that the neutrino urgently needs
to be reconsidered, not as a 'hot', but as the 'cold' dark matter particle.Comment: Proceedings paper of the invited talk at the 56th Rencontres de
Moriond La Thuile, Aosta Valley, Italy, January 30 - February 6, 2022. Full
proceedings available at: https://doi.org/10.58027/1e1n-797
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