500 research outputs found

    Full-field quantum correlations of spatially entangled photons

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    Spatially entangled twin photons allow the study of high-dimensional entanglement, and the Laguerre-Gauss modes are the most commonly used basis to discretize the single photon mode spaces. In this basis, to date only the azimuthal degree of freedom has been investigated experimentally due to its fundamental and experimental simplicity. We show that the full spatial entanglement is indeed accessible experimentally, i.e., we have found practicable radial detection modes with negligible cross correlations. This allows us to demonstrate hybrid azimuthal -- radial quantum correlations in a Hilbert space with more than 100 dimensions per photon.Comment: 6 page

    Observation of Goos-H\"{a}nchen shifts in metallic reflection

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    We report the first observation of the Goos-Ha¨\rm \ddot{\textbf{a}}nchen shift of a light beam incident on a metal surface. This phenomenon is particularly interesting because the Goos-Ha¨\rm \ddot{\textbf{a}}nchen shift for pp polarized light in metals is negative and much bigger than the positive shift for ss polarized light. The experimental result for the measured shifts as a function of the angle of incidence is in excellent agreement with theoretical predictions. In an energy-flux interpretation, our measurement shows the existence of a backward energy flow at the bare metal surface when this is excited by a pp polarized beam of light.Comment: The parer was published on Optics Express. The new version is modified according to the reviewers suggestion

    Experimental demonstration of fractional orbital angular momentum entanglement of two photons

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    The singular nature of a non-integer spiral phase plate allows easy manipulation of spatial degrees of freedom of photon states. Using two such devices, we have observed very high dimensional (D > 3700) spatial entanglement of twin photons generated by spontaneous parametric down-conversion.Comment: submitted to Phys. Rev. Let

    Fiber transport of spatially entangled photons

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    Entanglement in the spatial degrees of freedom of photons is an interesting resource for quantum information. For practical distribution of such entangled photons it is desireable to use an optical fiber, which in this case has to support multiple transverse modes. Here we report the use of a hollow-core photonic crystal fiber to transport spatially entangled qubits.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure

    Bouncing surface plasmons

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    Employing an interferometric cavity ring-down technique we study the launching, propagation and reflection of surface plasmons on a smooth gold-air interface that is intersected by two parallel, subwavelength wide slits. Inside the low-finesse optical cavity defined by these slits the surface plasmon is observed to make multiple bounces. Our experimental data allow us to determine the surface-plasmon group velocity (vgroup = 2.7±0.3×10?8 m/s at l = 770 nm) and the reflection coefficient (R ? 0.04) of each of our slits for an incident surface plasmon. Moreover, we find that the phase jump upon reflection off a slit is equal to the scattering phase acquired when light is converted into a plasmon at one slit and back-converted to light at the other slit. This allows us to explain fine details in the transmission spectrum of our double slits

    Shannon dimensionality of quantum channels and its application to photon entanglement

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    We introduce the concept of Shannon dimensionality D as a new way to quantify bipartite entanglement as measured in an experiment. This is applied to orbital-angular-momentum entanglement of two photons, using two state analyzers composed of a rotatable angular-sector phase plate that is lens-coupled to a single-mode fiber. We can deduce the value of D directly from the observed two-photon coincidence fringe. In our experiment, D varies between 2 and 6, depending on the experimental conditions. We predict how the Shannon dimensionality evolves when the number of angular sectors imprinted in the phase plate is increased and anticipate that D = 50 is experimentally within reach.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, accepted for Physical Review Letter
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