The localization of light in flat-band lattices has been recently proposed
and experimentally demonstrated in several configurations, assuming a classical
description of light. Here, we study the problem of light localization in the
quantum regime. We focus on quasi one-dimensional and two-dimensional lattices
which exhibit a perfect flat-band inside their linear spectrum. Localized
quantum states are constructed as eigenstates of the interaction Hamiltonian
with a vanishing eigenvalue and a well defined total photon number. These are
superpositions of Fock states with probability amplitudes given by positive as
well as negative square roots of multinomial coefficients. The classical
picture can be recovered by considering poissonian superpositions of localized
quantum states with different total photon number. We also study the
separability properties of flat band quantum states and apply them to the
transmission of information via multi-core fibers, where these states allow for
the total passive suppression of photon crosstalk and exhibit robustness
against photon losses. At the end, we propose a novel on-chip setup for the
experimental preparation of localized quantum states of light for any number of
photons.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figure