101 research outputs found
Intensity-intensity correlations as a probe of interferences - under conditions of none in the intensity
The different behaviour of first order interferences and second order
correlations are investigated for the case of two coherently excited atoms. For
intensity measurements this problem is equivalent to Young's double slit
experiment and was investigated in an experiment by Eichmann et al. [Phys. Rev.
Lett. 70, 2359 (1993)] and later analyzed in detail by Itano et al. [Phys. Rev.
A 57, 4176 (1998)]. Our results show that in cases where the intensity
interferences disappear the intensity-intensity correlations can display an
interference pattern with a visibility of up to 100%. The contrast depends on
the polarization selected for the detection and is independent of the strength
of the driving field. The nonclassical nature of the calculated
intensity-intensity correlations is also discussed.Comment: 14 pages, 2 figure
Heralded Entanglement of Arbitrary Degree in Remote Qubits
Incoherent scattering of photons off two remote atoms with a Lambda-level
structure is used as a basic Young-type interferometer to herald long-lived
entanglement of an arbitrary degree. The degree of entanglement, as measured by
the concurrence, is found to be tunable by two easily accessible experimental
parameters. Fixing one of them to certain values unveils an analog to the
Malus' law. An estimate of the variation in the degree of entanglement due to
uncertainties in an experimental realization is given.Comment: published version, 4 pages and 2 figure
Operational determination of multi-qubit entanglement classes via tuning of local operations
We present a physical setup with which it is possible to produce arbitrary
symmetric long-lived multiqubit entangled states in the internal ground levels
of photon emitters, including the paradigmatic GHZ and W states. In the case of
three emitters, where each tripartite entangled state belongs to one of two
well-defined entanglement classes, we prove a one-to-one correspondence between
well-defined sets of experimental parameters, i.e., locally tunable polarizer
orientations, and multiqubit entanglement classes inside the symmetric
subspace.Comment: Improved version. Accepted in Physical Review Letter
Nonlocality from N>2 independent single-photon emitters
We demonstrate that intensity correlations of second order in the fluorescence light of N>2 single-photon emitters may violate locality while the visibility of the signal remains below 1/√2≈71%. For this, we derive a homogeneous Bell-Wigner-type inequality, which can be applied to a broad class of experimental setups. We trace the violation of this inequality back to path entanglement created by the process of detection
Creating path entanglement and violating bell inequalities by independent photon sources
We demonstrate a novel approach of violating position-dependent Bell inequalities by photons emitted via independent single photon sources in free space. We trace this violation back to path entanglement created a posteriori by the selection of modes due to the process of detection
Generation of Total Angular Momentum Eigenstates in Remote Qubits
We propose a scheme enabling the universal coupling of angular momentum of
remote noninteracting qubits using linear optical tools only. Our system
consists of single-photon emitters in a -configuration that are
entangled among their long-lived ground-state qubits through suitably designed
measurements of the emitted photons. In this manner, we present an
experimentally feasible algorithm that is able to generate any of the
symmetric and nonsymmetric total angular momentum eigenstates spanning the
Hilbert space of the -qubit compound.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, improved presentation. Accepted in Physical
Review
Generation of Symmetric Dicke States of Remote Qubits with Linear Optics
We propose a method for generating all symmetric Dicke states, either in the
long-lived internal levels of N massive particles or in the polarization
degrees of freedom of photonic qubits, using linear optical tools only. By
means of a suitable multiphoton detection technique, erasing Welcher-Weg
information, our proposed scheme allows the generation and measurement of an
important class of entangled multiqubit states.Comment: New version, a few modifications and a new figure, accepted in
Physical Review Letter
A versatile source of polarization-entangled photons
We propose a method for the generation of a large variety of entangled
states, encoded in the polarization degrees of freedom of N photons, within the
same experimental setup. Starting with uncorrelated photons, emitted from N
arbitrary single photon sources, and using linear optical tools only, we
demonstrate the creation of all symmetric states, e.g., GHZ- and W-states, as
well as all symmetric and non-symmetric total angular momentum eigenstates of
the N qubit compound.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Monitoring the Dipole-Dipole Interaction via Quantum Jumps of Individual Atoms
The emission characteristics in the fluorescence of two laser-driven dipole-dipole-interacting three level atoms is investigated. When the light from both atoms is detected separately a correlation of the emission processes is observed in dependence of the dipole-dipole interaction. This opens the possibility to investigate the dipole-dipole interaction through the emission behavior. We present Monte-Carlo simulations which are in good agreement with the analytic solutions
Inhibition of cooperative quantum jumps due to fast spontaneous decay
A Quantum Monte Carlo wave function approach is used to rule out the possibility of cooperative effects in the quantum jump statistics of adjacent three-level ions of the type discussed in a series of experiments and theoretical investigations. By deriving analytical results and examining quantum jumps in various subspaces, we track this outcome to the fact that a fast spontaneous decay inhibits dipole-dipole-induced entanglement between the ions developing on a much slower time scale. This inhibition is demonstrated even for weak pumping of the fast transition. The Quantum Monte Carlo calculation thus sheds new light on the controversy arising from the findings of two recent conflicting experiments by Block et al. (Eur. Phys. J. D, 7 (1999) 461) and Donald et al. (Europhys. Lett., 51 (2000) 388)
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