23 research outputs found
On the role of the optical phase and quantum coherence in high harmonic generation
In this work we analyze the role of the optical phase and coherence of the
driving field in the process of high harmonic generation. We consider driving
the process of high harmonic generation with incoherent classical and
non-classical intense light fields, and show that harmonic radiation can be
generated even in cases where the phase of the driving field is completely
undetermined leading to vanishing mean electric field values. This implies that
quantum optical coherence in the driving field is not necessary for generating
high harmonic radiation, with the consequence that the emitted harmonic
radiation in those cases do likewise not exhibit quantum optical coherence. We
further show that the final quantum state of each harmonic is diagonal in the
photon number basis, from which we conclude that the measurement of the high
harmonic spectrum alone does not allow to infer on the coherence properties of
the harmonic radiation.Comment: 5 page
Theory of entanglement and measurement in high harmonic generation
Quantum information science and intense laser matter interaction are two
apparently unrelated fields. However, the recent developments of the quantum
optical description of the intense laser driven process of high harmonic
generation allow to conceive new light engineering protocols. Here, we
introduce the notion of quantum information theory to intense laser driven
processes by providing the quantum mechanical description of measurement
protocols for high harmonic generation in atoms. We explicitly evaluate
conditioning experiments on individual optical field modes, and provide the
corresponding quantum operation for coherent states. The associated positive
operator-valued measures are obtained, and give rise to the quantum theory of
measurement for the generation of high dimensional entangled states, and
coherent state superposition with controllable non-classical features on the
attosecond timescale.Comment: 6 page
On the limitations of the semi-classical picture in high harmonic generation
The recent progress in the quantum optical formulation of the process of high
harmonic generation has reached a point where the successful semi-classical
model shows its limitations. Until recently the light source which drives the
process was considered to be provided by a laser, in agreement with the
classical picture. However, quantum optics allows to consider light fields
beyond the classical realm, such as bright squeezed vacuum or Fock states. Both
field states have vanishing electric field amplitudes, but can still lead to
the generation of high harmonic radiation for sufficiently high intensities.
This poses new questions about the range of validity of the semi-classical
picture, which is the matter discussed here.Comment: 3 page
Metrological robustness of high photon number optical cat states
In the domain of quantum metrology cat states have demonstrated their utility
despite their inherent fragility with respect to photon loss. Here, we
introduce noise robust optical cat states which exhibit a metrological
robustness for phase estimation in the regime of high photon numbers. These cat
states are obtained from the intense laser driven process of high harmonic
generation (HHG), and in the ideal case of vanishing losses, show almost twice
the quantum Fisher information (QFI) compared to the even and odd cat states.
However, and more importantly, these HHG-cat states are much more robust
against noise such that the noisy HHG-cat outperforms the pure even/odd cat
states even in the presence of more than losses in the regime of high
photon numbers. Furthermore, in the regime of small losses, the HHG-cat remains
almost pure while the even/odd cat state counterpart already decohere to the
maximally mixed state. This demonstrates that high photon number optical cat
states can indeed be used for metrological applications even in the presence of
losses.Comment: 4 pages (3 figures
Molecular movie of ultrafast coherent rotational dynamics of OCS
Recording molecular movies on ultrafast timescales has been a longstanding goal for unravelling detailed information about molecular dynamics. Here we present the direct experimental recording of very-high-resolution and -fidelity molecular movies over more than one-and-a-half periods of the laser-induced rotational dynamics of carbonylsulfide (OCS) molecules. Utilising the combination of single quantum-state selection and an optimised two-pulse sequence to create a tailored rotational wavepacket, an unprecedented degree of field-free alignment, 〈cos2θ2D〉 = 0.96 (〈cos2θ〉 = 0.94) is achieved, exceeding the theoretical limit for single-pulse alignment. The very rich experimentally observed quantum dynamics is fully recovered by the angular probability distribution obtained from solutions of the time-dependent Schrödinger equation with parameters refined against the experiment. The populations and phases of rotational states in the retrieved time-dependent three-dimensional wavepacket rationalises the observed very high degree of alignment
Strong laser fields and their power to generate controllable high-photon-number coherent-state superpositions
Recently, intensely driven laser-matter interactions have been used to
connect the fields of strong laser field physics with quantum optics by
generating non-classical states of light. Here, we make a further key step and
show the potential of strong laser fields for generating controllable
high-photon-number coherent-state superpositions. This has been achieved by
using two of the most prominent strong-laser induced processes: high-harmonic
generation and above-threshold ionization. We show how the obtained
coherent-state superpositions change from an optical Schr\"odinger "cat" state
to a "kitten" state by changing the atomic density in the laser-atom
interaction region, and we demonstrate the generation of a 9-photon shifted
optical "cat" state which, to our knowledge, is the highest photon number
optical "cat" state experimentally reported. Our findings anticipate the
development of new methods that naturally lead to the creation of
high-photon-number controllable coherent-state superpositions, advancing
investigations in quantum technology.Comment: Revised version submitted to Physical Review
Analog simulation of high harmonic generation in atoms
The demanding experimental access to the ultrafast dynamics of materials
challenges our understanding of their electronic response to applied strong
laser fields. In this work, we show that trapped ultracold atoms with highly
controllable potentials can become an enabling tool to describe phenomena in a
scenario where some effects are more easily accessible and twelve orders of
magnitude slower. For this purpose, we characterize the mapping between the
attoscience platform and atomic simulators, and propose an experimental
protocol to simulate the emission yield of High Harmonic Generation, a regime
that has so far been elusive to cold atom simulation. As we illustrate, the
benchmark offered by these simulators can provide new insights on the
conversion efficiency of extended and short nuclear potentials, as well as the
response to applied elliptical polarized fields or ultrashort few-cycle pulses
Entanglement and squeezing of the optical field modes in high harmonic generation
Squeezing of optical fields, used as a powerful resource for many
applications, and the radiation properties in the process of high harmonic
generation have thus far been considered separately. In this Letter, we want to
clarify that the joint quantum state of all the optical field modes in the
process of high harmonic generation is in general entangled and squeezed. We
show that this is already the case in the simplest scenario of driving
uncorrelated atoms by a classical laser light field. The previous observation
of product coherent states after the high harmonic generation process is a
consequence of the assumption that the ground state depletion can be neglected,
which is related to vanishing dipole moment correlations. Furthermore, we
analyze how the resulting quadrature squeezing in the fundamental laser mode
after the interaction can be controlled and explicitly show that all field
modes are entangled.Comment: 4 pages (2 figures
Quantum Optical Analysis of High-Order Harmonic Generation in Semiconductors
The following sections are included: Introduction Semiclassical Analysis of the Light-Matter Interaction Quantum Optical Analysis of the Light-Matter Interaction Outlook Acknowledgments Reference