52 research outputs found
Inherent polarization entanglement generated from a monolithic semiconductor chip
Creating miniature chip scale implementations of optical quantum information
protocols is a dream for many in the quantum optics community. This is largely
because of the promise of stability and scalability. Here we present a
monolithically integratable chip architecture upon which is built a photonic
device primitive called a Bragg reflection waveguide (BRW). Implemented in
gallium arsenide, we show that, via the process of spontaneous parametric down
conversion, the BRW is capable of directly producing polarization entangled
photons without additional path difference compensation, spectral filtering or
post-selection. After splitting the twin-photons immediately after they emerge
from the chip, we perform a variety of correlation tests on the photon pairs
and show non-classical behaviour in their polarization. Combined with the BRW's
versatile architecture our results signify the BRW design as a serious
contender on which to build large scale implementations of optical quantum
processing devices
Photonic quantum information processing: a review
Photonic quantum technologies represent a promising platform for several
applications, ranging from long-distance communications to the simulation of
complex phenomena. Indeed, the advantages offered by single photons do make
them the candidate of choice for carrying quantum information in a broad
variety of areas with a versatile approach. Furthermore, recent technological
advances are now enabling first concrete applications of photonic quantum
information processing. The goal of this manuscript is to provide the reader
with a comprehensive review of the state of the art in this active field, with
a due balance between theoretical, experimental and technological results. When
more convenient, we will present significant achievements in tables or in
schematic figures, in order to convey a global perspective of the several
horizons that fall under the name of photonic quantum information.Comment: 36 pages, 6 figures, 634 references. Updated version with minor
changes and extended bibliograph
Planck 2013 results. VI. High Frequency Instrument data processing
We describe the processing of the 531 billion raw data samples from the High Frequency Instrument (HFI), which we performed to produce six temperature maps from the first 473 days of Planck-HFI survey data. These maps provide an accurate rendition of the sky emission at 100, 143, 217, 353, 545, and 857GHz with an angular resolution ranging from 9.Ì7 to 4.Ì6. The detector noise per (effective) beam solid angle is respectively, 10, 6 , 12, and 39âÎŒK in the four lowest HFI frequency channels (100â353GHz) and 13 and 14âkJy sr-1 in the 545 and 857âGHz channels. Relative to the 143âGHz channel, these two high frequency channels are calibrated to within 5% and the 353âGHz channel to the percent level. The 100 and 217âGHz channels, which together with the 143âGHz channel determine the high-multipole part of the CMB power spectrum (50 <â < 2500), are calibrated relative to 143âGHz to better than 0.2%
Planck 2013 results. VI. High Frequency Instrument data processing
We describe the processing of the 531 billion raw data samples from the High Frequency Instrument (hereafter HFI), which we performed to produce six temperature maps from the first 473 days of Planck-HFI survey data. These maps provide an accurate rendition of the sky emission at 100, 143, 217, 353, 545, and 857 GHz with an angular resolution ranging from 9.7 to 4.6 arcmin. The detector noise per (effective) beam solid angle is respectively, 10, 6, 12 and 39 microKelvin in HFI four lowest frequency channel (100--353 GHz) and 13 and 14 kJy/sr for the 545 and 857 GHz channels. Using the 143 GHz channel as a reference, these two high frequency channels are intercalibrated within 5% and the 353 GHz relative calibration is at the percent level. The 100 and 217 GHz channels, which together with the 143 GHz channel determine the high-multipole part of the CMB power spectrum (50 < l <2500), are intercalibrated at better than 0.2 %
Genotoxic damages in zebrafish submitted to a polymetallic gradient displayed by the Lot River (France)
Genotoxic effects of a polymetallic pollution gradient displayed by the Lot River and one of its tributary have been assessed on zebrafish Danio rerio. Three methods were compared: RAPD-PCR, the comet assay, and 8-oxo-7, 8-dihydro-2'-deoxyguanosine (8-oxodG) formation. The fishes were exposed for 14 days to waters collected from three stations: Joanis, a site polluted by cadmium (Cd) and zinc (Zn) (mean concentrations: 15. γg Cd/L and 550. γg Zn/L), Bouillac (mean concentrations: 0.55. γg Cd/L and 80. γg Zn/L), and Boisse-Penchot, a reference station (mean concentrations:<0.05. γg Cd/L and 7. γg Zn/L). The quantitative RAPD-PCR methodology proved to be sensitive enough to unmask metal genotoxicity after 3 and 7 days of exposure to Joanis water and after 14 days to Bouillac water, whereas the comet assay only detected DNA damages at the most contaminated station (Joanis). The 8-oxodG quantification was not sensitive enough to be used in zebrafish under these environmental conditions. © 2011 Elsevier Inc
Multi-photon absorption limits to heralded single photon sources
This work was supported in part by the Centre of Excellence (CUDOS, project number CE110001018), Laureate Fellowship (FL120100029) and Discovery Early Career Researcher Award (DE120102069, DE130101148, and DE120100226) programs of the Australian Research Council (ARC), EPSRC UK Silicon Photonics (Grant reference EP/F001428/1), EU FP7 GOSPEL project (grant no. 219299), and EU FP7 COPERNICUS (grant no. 249012).Single photons are of paramount importance to future quantum technologies, including quantum communication and computation. Nonlinear photonic devices using parametric processes offer a straightforward route to generating photons, however additional nonlinear processes may come into play and interfere with these sources. Here we analyse spontaneous four-wave mixing (SFWM) sources in the presence of multi-photon processes. We conduct experiments in silicon and gallium indium phosphide photonic crystal waveguides which display inherently different nonlinear absorption processes, namely two-photon (TPA) and three-photon absorption (ThPA), respectively. We develop a novel model capturing these diverse effects which is in excellent quantitative agreement with measurements of brightness, coincidence-to-accidental ratio (CAR) and second-order correlation function g((2))(0), showing that TPA imposes an intrinsic limit on heralded single photon sources. We build on these observations to devise a new metric, the quantum utility (QMU), enabling further optimisation of single photon sources.Publisher PDFPeer reviewe
Données bioclimatiques, édaphiques et production ligneuse de quelques essences forestiÚres méditerranéennes: aspects méthodologiques
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