26 research outputs found
Enhancing entanglement detection of quantum optical frequency combs via stimulated emission
We investigate the performance of a certain nonclassicality identifier,
expressed via integrated second-order intensity moments of optical fields, in
revealing bipartite entanglement of quantum-optical frequency combs (QOFCs),
which are generated in both spontaneous and stimulated parametric
down-conversion processes. We show that, by utilizing that nonclassicality
identifier, one can well identify the entanglement of the QOFC directly from
the experimentally measured intensity moments without invoking any state
reconstruction techniques or homodyne detection. Moreover, we demonstrate that
the stimulated generation of the QOFC improves the entanglement detection of
these fields with the nonclassicality identifier. Additionally, we show that
the nonclassicality identifier can be expressed in a factorized form of
detectors quantum efficiencies and the number of modes, if the QOFC consists of
many copies of the same two-mode twin beam. As an example, we apply the
nonclassicality identifier to two specific types of QOFC, where: (i) the QOFC
consists of many independent two-mode twin beams with non-overlapped spatial
frequency modes, and (ii) the QOFC contains entangled spatial frequency modes
which are completely overlapped, i.e., each mode is entangled with all the
remaining modes in the system. We show that, in both cases, the nonclassicality
identifier can reveal bipartite entanglement of the QOFC including noise, and
that it becomes even more sensitive for the stimulated processes.Comment: 11 p., 8 fig
Geometry of the Field-Moment Spaces for Quadratic Bosonic Systems: Diabolically Degenerated Exceptional Points on Complex -Polytopes
-Polytopes are a generalization of polyhedra in dimensions. Here, we
show that complex -polytopes naturally emerge in the higher-order field
moments spaces of quadratic bosonic systems, thus revealing their geometric
character. In particular, a complex-valued evolution matrix, governing the
dynamics of th-order field moments of a bosonic dimer, can describe a
complex -dimensional hypercube. The existence of such -polytopes is
accompanied by the presence of high-order diabolic points (DPs). Interestingly,
when the field-moment space additionally exhibits exceptional points (EPs), the
formation of -polytopes may lead to the emergence of diabolically
degenerated EPs, due to the interplay between DPs and EPs. Such intriguing
spectral properties of complex polytopes may enable constructing photonic
lattice systems with similar spectral features in real space. Our results can
be exploited in various quantum protocols based on EPs, paving a new direction
of research in this field.Comment: 9 page