As normally used, no commercially available camera has a low-enough dark
noise to directly produce video recordings of double-slit interference at the
photon-by-photon level, because readout noise significantly contaminates or
overwhelms the signal. In this work, noise levels are significantly reduced by
turning on the camera only when the presence of a photon has been heralded by
the arrival, at an independent detector, of a time-correlated photon produced
via parametric down-conversion. This triggering scheme provides the improvement
required for direct video imaging of Young's double-slit experiment with single
photons, allowing clarified versions of this foundational demonstration.
Further, we introduce variations on this experiment aimed at promoting
discussion of the role spatial coherence plays in such a measurement. We also
emphasize complementary aspects of single-photon measurement, where imaging
yields (transverse) position information, while diffraction yields the
transverse momentum, and highlight the roles of transverse position and
momentum correlations between down-converted photons, including examples of
"ghost" imaging and diffraction. The videos can be accessed at
http://sun.iwu.edu/~gspaldin/SinglePhotonVideos.html online.Comment: 7 pages, 8 figure