4,281 research outputs found
Super-Resolving Quantum Radar: Coherent-State Sources with Homodyne Detection Suffice to Beat the Diffraction Limit
There has been much recent interest in quantum metrology for applications to
sub-Raleigh ranging and remote sensing such as in quantum radar. For quantum
radar, atmospheric absorption and diffraction rapidly degrades any actively
transmitted quantum states of light, such as N00N states, so that for this
high-loss regime the optimal strategy is to transmit coherent states of light,
which suffer no worse loss than the linear Beer's law for classical radar
attenuation, and which provide sensitivity at the shot-noise limit in the
returned power. We show that coherent radar radiation sources, coupled with a
quantum homodyne detection scheme, provide both longitudinal and angular
super-resolution much below the Rayleigh diffraction limit, with sensitivity at
shot-noise in terms of the detected photon power. Our approach provides a
template for the development of a complete super-resolving quantum radar system
with currently available technology.Comment: 23 pages, content is identical to published versio
Generation of Large Number-Path Entanglement Using Linear Optics and Feed-Forward
We show how an idealised measurement procedure can condense photons from two
modes into one, and how, by feeding forward the results of the measurement, it
is possible to generate efficiently superpositions of components for which only
one mode is populated, commonly called ``N00N states''. For the basic
procedure, sources of number states leak onto a beam splitter, and the output
ports are monitored by photodetectors. We find that detecting a fixed fraction
of the input at one output port suffices to direct the remainder to the same
port with high probability, however large the initial state. When instead
photons are detected at both ports, Schr\"{o}dinger cat states are produced. We
describe a circuit for making the components of such a state orthogonal, and
another for subsequent conversion to a N00N state. Our approach scales
exponentially better than existing proposals. Important applications include
quantum imaging and metrology
The creation of large photon-number path entanglement conditioned on photodetection
Large photon-number path entanglement is an important resource for enhanced
precision measurements and quantum imaging. We present a general constructive
protocol to create any large photon number path-entangled state based on the
conditional detection of single photons. The influence of imperfect detectors
is considered and an asymptotic scaling law is derived.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Coherent and Squeezed Vacuum Light Interferometry: Parity detection hits the Heisenberg limit
The interference between coherent and squeezed vacuum light can produce path
entangled states with very high fidelities. We show that the phase sensitivity
of the above interferometric scheme with parity detection saturates the quantum
Cramer-Rao bound, which reaches the Heisenberg-limit when the coherent and
squeezed vacuum light are mixed in roughly equal proportions. For the same
interferometric scheme, we draw a detailed comparison between parity detection
and a symmetric-logarithmic-derivative-based detection scheme suggested by Ono
and Hofmann.Comment: Change in the format from aps to iop since we decided to submit it to
NJP; Minor changes in tex
Strong violations of Bell-type inequalities for Werner-like states
We investigate the violation of Bell-type inequalities for two-qubit
Werner-like states parametrized by the positive parameter 0<p<1. We use an
unbalanced homodyne detection scheme to obtain the quantum mechanical
probabilities. A violation of the Bell-Wigner and Janssens inequalities is
obtained for a large range of the parameter p. The range given by these
inequalities is greater than the one given by the Clauser-Horne inequality. The
range in which a violation is attained actually coincides with the range where
the Werner-like states are known to be nonseparabel, i.e., for p>1/3. However,
the improvement over the Clauser-Horne inequality is achieved at the price of
restricting the class of possible local hidden variable theories.Comment: Revised manuscript, accepted for publication in PR
Optical Communication Noise Rejection Using Correlated Photons
This paper describes a completely new way to perform noise rejection using a
two-photon sensitive detector and taking advantage of the properties of
correlated photons to improve an optical communications link in the presence of
uncorrelated noise. In particular, a detailed analysis is made of the case
where a classical link would be saturated by an intense background, such as
when a satellite is in front of the sun,and identifies a regime where the
quantum correlating system has superior performance.Comment: 12 pages, 1 figure, 1 tabl
Quantum Clock Synchronization Based on Shared Prior Entanglement
We demonstrate that two spatially separated parties (Alice and Bob) can
utilize shared prior quantum entanglement, and classical communications, to
establish a synchronized pair of atomic clocks. In contrast to classical
synchronization schemes, the accuracy of our protocol is independent of Alice
or Bob's knowledge of their relative locations or of the properties of the
intervening medium.Comment: 4 page
Electromagnetically induced spatial light modulation
We theoretically report that, utilizing electromagnetically induced
transparency (EIT), the transverse spatial properties of weak probe fields can
be fast modulated by using optical patterns (e.g. images) with desired
intensity distributions in the coupling fields. Consequently, EIT systems can
function as high-speed optically addressed spatial light modulators. To
exemplify our proposal, we indicate the generation and manipulation of
Laguerre-Gaussian beams based on either phase or amplitude modulation in hot
vapor EIT systems.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figure
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