113 research outputs found
Strong polarization mode coupling in microresonators
We observe strong modal coupling between the TE00 and TM00 modes in Si3N4
ring resonators revealed by avoided crossings of the corresponding resonances.
Such couplings result in significant shifts of the resonance frequencies over a
wide range around the crossing points. This leads to an effective dispersion
that is one order of magnitude larger than the intrinsic dispersion and creates
broad windows of anomalous dispersion. We also observe the changes to frequency
comb spectra generated in Si3N4 microresonators due polarization mode and
higher-order mode crossings and suggest approaches to avoid these effects.
Alternatively, such polarization mode-crossings can be used as a novel tool for
dispersion engineering in microresonators.Comment: Comments are very welcome (send to corresponding author
Matchgate quantum computing and non-local process analysis
In the circuit model, quantum computers rely on the availability of a
universal quantum gate set. A particularly intriguing example is a set of
two-qubit only gates: matchgates, along with SWAP (the exchange of two qubits).
In this paper, we show a simple decomposition of arbitrary matchgates into
better known elementary gates, and implement a matchgate in a linear-optics
experiment using single photons. The gate performance was fully characterized
via quantum process tomography. Moreover, we represent the resulting
reconstructed quantum process in a novel way, as a fidelity map in the space of
all possible nonlocal two-qubit unitaries. We propose the non-local distance -
which is independent of local imperfections like uncorrelated noise or
uncompensated local rotations - as a new diagnostic process measure for the
non-local properties of the implemented gate.Comment: * published version * extended title reflecting the additions on
non-local process analyis in the manuscrip
Polarization-entanglement conserving frequency conversion of photons
Entangled photons play a pivotal role in the distribution of quantum
information in quantum networks. However, the frequency bands for optimal
transmission and storage of photons are not necessarily the same. Here we
experimentally demonstrate the coherent frequency conversion of photons
entangled in their polarization, a widely used degree of freedom in photonic
quantum information processing. We verify the successful entanglement
conversion by violating a Clauser-Horne-Shimony-Holt (CHSH) Bell inequality and
fully confirm that our characterised fidelity of entanglement transfer is close
to unity using both state and process tomography. Our implementation is robust
and flexible, making it a practical building block for future quantum networks.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Spectral compression of single photons
Photons are critical to quantum technologies since they can be used for
virtually all quantum information tasks: in quantum metrology, as the
information carrier in photonic quantum computation, as a mediator in hybrid
systems, and to establish long distance networks. The physical characteristics
of photons in these applications differ drastically; spectral bandwidths span
12 orders of magnitude from 50 THz for quantum-optical coherence tomography to
50 Hz for certain quantum memories. Combining these technologies requires
coherent interfaces that reversibly map centre frequencies and bandwidths of
photons to avoid excessive loss. Here we demonstrate bandwidth compression of
single photons by a factor 40 and tunability over a range 70 times that
bandwidth via sum-frequency generation with chirped laser pulses. This
constitutes a time-to-frequency interface for light capable of converting
time-bin to colour entanglement and enables ultrafast timing measurements. It
is a step toward arbitrary waveform generation for single and entangled
photons.Comment: 6 pages (4 figures) + 6 pages (3 figures
Direct generation of photon triplets using cascaded photon-pair sources
Non-classical states of light, such as entangled photon pairs and number
states, are essential for fundamental tests of quantum mechanics and optical
quantum technologies. The most widespread technique for creating these quantum
resources is the spontaneous parametric down-conversion (SPDC) of laser light
into photon pairs. Conservation of energy and momentum in this process, known
as phase-matching, gives rise to strong correlations which are used to produce
two-photon entanglement in various degrees of freedom. It has been a
longstanding goal of the quantum optics community to realise a source that can
produce analogous correlations in photon triplets, but of the many approaches
considered, none have been technically feasible. In this paper we report the
observation of photon triplets generated by cascaded down-conversion. Here each
triplet originates from a single pump photon, and therefore quantum
correlations will extend over all three photons in a way not achievable with
independently created photon pairs. We expect our photon-triplet source to open
up new avenues of quantum optics and become an important tool in quantum
technologies. Our source will allow experimental interrogation of novel quantum
correlations, the post-selection free generation of tripartite entanglement
without post- selection and the generation of heralded entangled-photon pairs
suitable for linear optical quantum computing. Two of the triplet photons have
a wavelength matched for optimal transmission in optical fibres, ideally suited
for three-party quantum communication. Furthermore, our results open
interesting regimes of non-linear optics, as we observe spontaneous
down-conversion pumped by single photons, an interaction also highly relevant
to optical quantum computing.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, 1 table; accepted by Natur
Microscopy with undetected photons in the mid-infrared
Owing to its capacity for unique (bio)-chemical specificity, microscopy with mid-infrared (IR) illumination holds tremendous promise for a wide range of biomedical and industrial applications. The primary limitation, however, remains detection, with current mid-IR detection technology often marrying inferior technical capabilities with prohibitive costs. Here, we experimentally show how nonlinear interferometry with entangled light can provide a powerful tool for mid-IR microscopy while only requiring near-IR detection with a silicon-based camera. In this proof-of-principle implementation, we demonstrate widefield imaging over a broad wavelength range covering 3.4 to 4.3 μm and demonstrate a spatial resolution of 35 μm for images containing 650 resolved elements. Moreover, we demonstrate that our technique is suitable for acquiring microscopic images of biological tissue samples in the mid-IR. These results form a fresh perspective for potential relevance of quantum imaging techniques in the life sciences
Picosecond-resolution single-photon time lens for temporal mode quantum processing
Techniques to control the spectro-temporal properties of quantum states of light at ultrafast time scales are crucial for numerous applications in quantum information science. In this work, we report an all-optical time lens for quantum signals based on Bragg-scattering four-wave mixing with picosecond resolution. Our system achieves a temporal magnification factor of 158 with single-photon level inputs, which is sufficient to overcome the intrinsic timing jitter of superconducting nanowire single-photon detectors. We demonstrate discrimination of two terahertz-bandwidth, single-photon-level pulses with 2.1 ps resolution (electronic jitter corrected resolution of 1.25 ps).We draw on elegant tools from Fourier optics to further show that the time-lens framework can be extended to perform complex unitary spectro-temporal transformations by imparting optimized temporal and spectral phase profiles to the input waveforms. Using numerical optimization techniques, we show that a four-stage transformation can realize an efficient temporal mode sorter that demultiplexes 10 Hermite–Gaussian (HG) modes. Our time-lens-based framework represents a new toolkit for arbitrary spectro-temporal processing of single photons, with applications in temporal mode quantum processing, high-dimensional quantum key distribution, temporal mode matching for quantum networks, and quantum-enhanced sensing with time-frequency entangled states.Chaitali Joshi, Ben M. Sparkes, Alessandro Farsi, Thomas Gerrits, Varun Verma, Sven Ramelow, Sae Woo Nam, and Alexander L. Gaet
Violation of local realism with freedom of choice
Bell's theorem shows that local realistic theories place strong restrictions
on observable correlations between different systems, giving rise to Bell's
inequality which can be violated in experiments using entangled quantum states.
Bell's theorem is based on the assumptions of realism, locality, and the
freedom to choose between measurement settings. In experimental tests,
"loopholes" arise which allow observed violations to still be explained by
local realistic theories. Violating Bell's inequality while simultaneously
closing all such loopholes is one of the most significant still open challenges
in fundamental physics today. In this paper, we present an experiment that
violates Bell's inequality while simultaneously closing the locality loophole
and addressing the freedom-of-choice loophole, also closing the latter within a
reasonable set of assumptions. We also explain that the locality and
freedom-of-choice loopholes can be closed only within non-determinism, i.e. in
the context of stochastic local realism.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures, 2 tables, published online before print:
http://www.pnas.org/content/early/2010/10/29/1002780107.abstrac
Experimental non-classicality of an indivisible quantum system
Quantum theory demands that, in contrast to classical physics, not all
properties can be simultaneously well defined. The Heisenberg Uncertainty
Principle is a manifestation of this fact. Another important corollary arises
that there can be no joint probability distribution describing the outcomes of
all possible measurements, allowing a quantum system to be classically
understood. We provide the first experimental evidence that even for a single
three-state system, a qutrit, no such classical model can exist that correctly
describes the results of a simple set of pairwise compatible measurements. Not
only is a single qutrit the simplest system in which such a contradiction is
possible, but, even more importantly, the contradiction cannot result from
entanglement, because such a system is indivisible, and it does not even allow
the concept of entanglement between subsystems.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures, 2 table
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