807 research outputs found
Smooth quantum-classical transition in photon subtraction and addition processes
Recently Parigi et al. [Science 317, 1890 (2007)] implemented experimentally
the photon subtraction and addition processes from/to a light field in a
conditional way, when the required operations were produced successfully only
upon the positive outcome of a separate measurement. It was verified that for a
low intensity beam (quantum regime) the bosonic annihilation operator does
indeed describe a single photon subtraction, while the creation operator
describes a photon addition. Nonetheless, the exact formal expressions for
these operations do not always reduce to these simple identifications, and in
this connection here we deduce the general superoperators for multiple photons
subtraction and addition processes and analyze the statistics of the resulting
states for classical field states having an arbitrary intensity. We obtain
closed analytical expressions and verify that for classical fields with high
intensity (classical regime) the operators that describe photon subtraction and
addition processes deviate significantly from simply annihilation and creation
operators. Complementarily, we analyze in details such a smooth
quantum-classical transition as function of beam intensity for both processes.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures. To appear in Phys. Rev.
Semiconductor quantum dot - a quantum light source of multicolor photons with tunable statistics
We investigate the intensity correlation properties of single photons emitted
from an optically excited single semiconductor quantum dot. The second order
temporal coherence function of the photons emitted at various wavelengths is
measured as a function of the excitation power. We show experimentally and
theoretically, for the first time, that a quantum dot is not only a source of
correlated non-classical monochromatic photons but is also a source of
correlated non-classical \emph{multicolor} photons with tunable correlation
properties. We found that the emitted photon statistics can be varied by the
excitation rate from a sub-Poissonian one, where the photons are temporally
antibunched, to super-Poissonian, where they are temporally bunched.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Decoherence and thermalization dynamics of a quantum oscillator
We introduce the quantitative measures characterizing the rates of
decoherence and thermalization of quantum systems. We study the time evolution
of these measures in the case of a quantum harmonic oscillator whose relaxation
is described in the framework of the standard master equation, for various
initial states (coherent, `cat', squeezed and number). We establish the
conditions under which the true decoherence measure can be approximated by the
linear entropy . We show that at low temperatures and for
highly excited initial states the decoherence process consists of three
distinct stages with quite different time scales. In particular, the `cat'
states preserve 50% of the initial coherence for a long time interval which
increases logarithmically with increase of the initial energy.Comment: 24 pages, LaTex, 8 ps figures, accepted for publication in J. Opt.
Engineering Quantum Jump Superoperators for Single Photon Detectors
We study the back-action of a single photon detector on the electromagnetic
field upon a photodetection by considering a microscopic model in which the
detector is constituted of a sensor and an amplification mechanism. Using the
quantum trajectories approach we determine the Quantum Jump Superoperator (QJS)
that describes the action of the detector on the field state immediately after
the photocount. The resulting QJS consists of two parts: the bright counts
term, representing the real photoabsorptions, and the dark counts term,
representing the amplification of intrinsic excitations inside the detector.
First we compare our results for the counting rates to experimental data,
showing a good agreement. Then we point out that by modifying the field
frequency one can engineer the form of QJS, obtaining the QJS's proposed
previously in an ad hoc manner
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