20 research outputs found
Analog Stabilization of an Electro-Optic I/Q Modulator with an Auxiliary Modulation Tone
Proper operation of electro-optic I/Q modulators rely on precise adjustment
and control of the relative phase biases between the modulator's internal
interferometer arms. We present an all-analog phase bias locking scheme where
error signals are obtained from the beat between the optical carrier and
optical tones generated by an auxiliary 2 MHz RF-tone to lock the phases of all
three involved interferometers for operation up to 10 GHz. With the developed
method, we demonstrate an I/Q modulator in carrier-suppressed single-sideband
mode, where the suppressed carrier and sideband are locked at optical power
levels relative to the transmitted sideband. We describe a simple
analytical model for calculating the error signals, and detail the
implementation of the electronic circuitry for the implementation of the
method.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figure
Improving cold-atom sensors with quantum entanglement: Prospects and challenges
Quantum entanglement has been generated and verified in cold-atom experiments
and used to make atom-interferometric measurements below the shot-noise limit.
However, current state-of-the-art cold-atom devices exploit separable (i.e.
unentangled) atomic states. This Perspective piece asks the question: can
entanglement usefully improve cold-atom sensors, in the sense that it gives new
sensing capabilities unachievable with current state-of-the-art devices? We
briefly review the state-of-the-art in precision cold-atom sensing, focussing
on clocks and inertial sensors, identifying the potential benefits entanglement
could bring to these devices, and the challenges that need to be overcome to
realize these benefits. We survey demonstrated methods of generating
metrologically-useful entanglement in cold-atom systems, note their relative
strengths and weaknesses, and assess their prospects for near-to-medium term
quantum-enhanced cold-atom sensing.Comment: Invited perspective; close to published version. Note the change in
title. 19 pages, 7 figure
Monitoring and active stabilization of laser injection locking using beam ellipticity
We unveil a powerful method for stabilization of laser injection locking
based on sensing variations in the output beam ellipticity of an optically
seeded laser. The effect arises due to an interference between the seeding beam
and the injected laser output. We demonstrate the method for a commercial
semiconductor laser without the need for any internal changes to the
readily-operational injection locked laser system that was utilized. The method
can also be used to increase the mode-hop free tuning range of lasers, and has
the potential to fill a void in the low-noise laser industry.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures. Additional data and figure presented in the new
version accepted for optics letter
Retrieval of cavity-generated atomic spin squeezing after free-space release
We demonstrate that releasing atoms into free space from an optical lattice does not deteriorate cavity-generated spin squeezing for metrological purposes. In this work, an ensemble of 500000 spin-squeezed atoms in a high-finesse optical cavity with near-uniform atom-cavity coupling is prepared, released into free space, recaptured in the cavity, and probed. Up to ∼10 dB of metrologically relevant squeezing is retrieved for 700μs free-fall times, and decaying levels of squeezing are realized for up to 3 ms free-fall times. The degradation of squeezing results from loss of atom-cavity coupling homogeneity between the initial squeezed state generation and final collective state readout. A theoretical model is developed to quantify this degradation and this model is experimentally validated
Constraints on probing quantum coherence to infer gravitational entanglement
Finding a feasible scheme for testing the quantum mechanical nature of the
gravitational interaction has been attracting an increasing level of attention.
Gravity mediated entanglement generation so far appears to be the key
ingredient for a potential experiment. In a recent proposal [D. Carney et al.,
Phys. Rev. X Quantum 2, 030330 (2021)] combining an atom interferometer with a
low-frequency mechanical oscillator, a coherence revival test is proposed for
verifying this entanglement generation. With measurements performed only on the
atoms, this protocol bypasses the need for correlation measurements. Here we
explore formulations of such a protocol, and specifically find that in the
envisioned regime of operation with high thermal excitation, semi-classical
models, where there is no concept of entanglement, also give the same
experimental signatures. We elucidate in a fully quantum mechanical calculation
that entanglement is not the source of the revivals in the relevant parameter
regime. We argue that, in its current form, the suggested test is only relevant
if the oscillator is nearly in a pure quantum state, and in this regime the
effects are too small to be measurable. We further discuss potential open ends.
The results highlight the importance and subtleties of explicitly considering
how the quantum case differs from the classical expectations when testing for
the quantum mechanical nature of a physical system.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure, new title, new abstract, a new discussion section,
formatting change
Applications of quantum measurement techniques: counterfactual quantum computation, spin hall effect of light, and atomic-vapor-based photon detectors
This dissertation investigates several physical phenomena in atomic and optical physics, and quantum information science, by utilizing various types and techniques of quantum measurements. It is the deeper concepts of these measurements, and the way they are integrated into the seemingly unrelated topics investigated, which binds together the research presented here. The research comprises three different topics: Counterfactual quantum computation, the spin Hall effect of light, and ultra-high-efficiency photon detectors based on atomic vapors.
Counterfactual computation entails obtaining answers from a quantum computer without actually running it, and is accomplished by preparing the computer as a whole into a superposition of being activated and not activated. The first experimental demonstration is presented, including the best performing implementation of Grover???s quantum search algorithm to date. In addition, we develop new counterfactual computation protocols that enable unconditional and completely deterministic operation. These methods stimulated a debate in the literature, on the meaning of counterfactuality in quantum processes, which we also discuss.
The spin Hall effect of light entails tiny spin-dependent displacements, unsuspected until 2004, of a beam of light when it changes propagation direction. The first experimental demonstration of the effect during refraction at an air-glass interface is presented, together with a novel enabling metrological tool relying on the concepts of quantum weak measurements. Extensions of the effect to smoothly varying media are also presented, along with utilization of a time-varying version of the weak measurement techniques.
Our approach to ultra-high-efficiency photon detection develops and extends a recent novel non-solid-state scheme for photo-detection based on atomic vapors. This approach is in principle capable of resolving the number of photons in a pulse, can be extended to non-destructive detection of photons, and most importantly is proposed to operate with single-photon detection efficiencies exceeding 99%, ideally without dark counts. Such a detector would have tremendous implications, e.g., for optical quantum information processing. The feasibility of operation of this approach at the desired level is studied theoretically and several promising physical systems are investigated
Constraints on probing quantum coherence to infer gravitational entanglement
Finding a feasible scheme for testing the quantum mechanical nature of the gravitational interaction has been attracting an increasing level of attention. Gravity mediated entanglement generation so far appears to be the key ingredient for a potential experiment. In a recent proposal [D. Carney et al., PRX Quantum 2, 030330 (2021)] combining an atom interferometer with a low-frequency mechanical oscillator, a coherence revival test is proposed for verifying this entanglement generation. With measurements performed only on the atoms, this protocol bypasses the need for correlation measurements. Here, we explore formulations of such a protocol, and specifically find that in the envisioned regime of operation with high thermal excitation, semiclassical models, where there is no concept of entanglement, also give the same experimental signatures. We elucidate in a fully quantum mechanical calculation that entanglement is not the source of the revivals in the relevant parameter regime. We argue that, in its current form, the suggested test is only relevant if the oscillator is nearly in a pure quantum state, and in this regime the effects are too small to be measurable. We further discuss potential open ends. The results highlight the importance and subtleties of explicitly considering how the quantum case differs from the classical expectations when testing for the quantum mechanical nature of a physical system