167 research outputs found
Photostatistics Reconstruction via Loop Detector Signatures
Photon-number resolving detectors are a fundamental building-block of optical
quantum information processing protocols. A loop detector, combined with
appropriate statistical processing, can be used to convert a binary on/off
photon counter into a photon-number-resolving detector. Here we describe the
idea of a signature of photon-counts, which may be used to more robustly
reconstruct the photon number distribution of a quantum state. The methodology
is applied experimentally in a 9-port loop detector operating at a
telecommunications wavelength and compared directly to the approach whereby
only the number of photon-counts is used to reconstruct the input distribution.
The signature approach is shown to be more robust against calibration errors,
exhibit reduced statistical uncertainty, and reduced reliance on a-priori
assumptions about the input state.Comment: 13 pages, 12 figure
Experimental reconstruction of photon statistics without photon counting
Experimental reconstructions of photon number distributions of both
continuous-wave and pulsed light beams are reported. Our scheme is based on
on/off avalanche photodetection assisted by maximum-likelihood estimation and
does not involve photon counting. Reconstructions of the distribution for both
semiclassical and quantum states of light are reported for single-mode as well
as for multimode beams.Comment: Revised version: in press on PRL. 4 pages, 4 fig
State reconstruction by on/off measurements
We demonstrate a state reconstruction technique which provides either the
Wigner function or the density matrix of a field mode and requires only
avalanche photodetectors, without any phase or amplitude discrimination power.
It represents an alternative, of simpler implementation, to quantum homodyne
tomography.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, revised and enlarged versio
A Multi-Channel Low-Power System-on-Chip for in vivo NeuralSpike Recording
This paper reports a multi-channel neural spike
recording system-on-chip (SoC) with digital data compression
and wireless telemetry. The circuit consists of a 64-channel
low-power low-noise analog front-end, a single 8-bit analog-todigital
converter (ADC), followed by digital signal compression
and transmission units. The 400-MHz transmitter employs a
Manchester-Coded Frequency Shift Keying (MC-FSK) modulator
with low modulation index. In this way a 1.25-Mbit/s data
rate is delivered within a band of about 3 MHz. Compression of
the raw data is implemented by detecting the action potentials
(APs) and storing 20 samples for each spike waveform. The choice
greatly improves data quality and allows single neuron identification.
A larger than 10-m transmission range is reached with
an overall power consumption of 17.2 mW. This figure translates
into a power budget of 269 μW per channel, which is in line
with the results in literature but allowing a larger transmission
distance and more efficient wireless link bandwidth occupation.
The implemented IC was mounted on a small and light printed
circuit board to be used during neuroscience experiments with
freely-behaving rats. Powered by 2 AAA batteries the system can
work continuously for more than 100 hours allowing long-lasting
neural spike recordings
Sub-shot-noise photon-number correlation in mesoscopic twin-beam of light
We demonstrate sub-shot-noise photon-number correlations in a (temporal)
multimode mesoscopic ( detected photons) twin-beam produced by
ps-pulsed spontaneous non-degenerate parametric downconversion. We have
separately detected the signal and idler distributions of photons collected in
twin coherence areas and found that the variance of the photon-count difference
goes below the shot-noise limit by 3.25 dB. The number of temporal modes
contained in the twin-beam, as well as the size of the twin coherence areas,
depends on the pump intensity. Our scheme is based on spontaneous
downconversion and thus does not suffer from limitations due to the finite gain
of the parametric process. Twin-beams are also used to demonstrate the
conditional preparation of a nonclassical (sub-Poissonian) state.Comment: 5 pages, 5 (low-res) figures, to appear on PR
Evaluation of Tropical and Subtropical Forage Grasses in the Northwest Region of Rio Grande Do Sul, Brazil
A collection of 137 accessions of tropical and subtropical grasses of Pennisetum purpureum (53), Panicum maximum (10), Brachiaria spp. (9), Hemarthria altissima (19), Setaria spp. (11), Digitaria spp. (22), Cynodon spp.(7) and Paspalum spp. (6) was evaluated for frost tolerance (FT), dry matter yield per cut (DMYC), number of cuts (NC) and accumulated dry matter yield per year (ADMY). Crude protein content (CPC), leaf/stem ratio (L/S), pubescence (P) and animal preference under grazing (AP) were also recorded in 20 entries of in P. purpureum. Data exploration involved cluster analysis and ordination, revealing the most promising entries among and within genus. In general ADMY and FT were the most important variables to discriminate entries. Pennisetum, Panicum and Hemarthria were the most productive genus with high FT. Cynodon and Paspalum showed high FT
Measuring the photon distribution by ON/OFF photodectors
Reconstruction of photon statistics of optical states provide fundamental
information on the nature of any optical field and find various relevant
applications. Nevertheless, no detector that can reliably discriminate the
number of incident photons is available. On the other hand the alternative of
reconstructing density matrix by quantum tomography leads to various technical
difficulties that are particular severe in the pulsed regime (where mode
matching between signal an local oscillator is very challenging). Even if
on/off detectors, as usual avalanche PhotoDiodes operating in Geiger mode, seem
useless as photocounters, recently it was shown how reconstruction of photon
statistics is possible by considering a variable quantum efficiency. Here we
present experimental reconstructions of photon number distributions of both
continuous-wave and pulsed light beams in a scheme based on on/off avalanche
photodetection assisted by maximum-likelihood estimation. Reconstructions of
the distribution for both semiclassical and quantum states of light (as single
photon, coherent, pseudothermal and multithermal states) are reported for
single-mode as well as for multimode beams. The stability and good accuracy
obtained in the reconstruction of these states clearly demonstrate the
interesting potentialities of this simple technique.Comment: 6 pages, 7 figures, to appear on Laser Physic
Reconstruction of photon statistics using low performance photon counters
The output of a photodetector consists of a current pulse whose charge has
the statistical distribution of the actual photon numbers convolved with a
Bernoulli distribution. Photodetectors are characterized by a nonunit quantum
efficiency, i.e. not all the photons lead to a charge, and by a finite
resolution, i.e. a different number of detected photons leads to a
discriminable values of the charge only up to a maximum value. We present a
detailed comparison, based on Monte Carlo simulated experiments and real data,
among the performances of detectors with different upper limits of counting
capability. In our scheme the inversion of Bernoulli convolution is performed
by maximum-likelihood methods assisted by measurements taken at different
quantum efficiencies. We show that detectors that are only able to discriminate
between zero, one and more than one detected photons are generally enough to
provide a reliable reconstruction of the photon statistics for single-peaked
distributions, while detectors with higher resolution limits do not lead to
further improvements. In addition, we demonstrate that, for semiclassical
states, even on/off detectors are enough to provide a good reconstruction.
Finally, we show that a reliable reconstruction of multi-peaked distributions
requires either higher quantum efficiency or better capability in
discriminating high number of detected photons.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figure
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