38th Annual Meeting of the Division of Atomic, Molecular, and Optical Physics
Volume 52, Number 7
Tuesday–Saturday, June 5–9, 2007;
Calgary, Alberta, Canada
Session G2: Quantum Metrology and Imaging
8:00 AM–10:24 AM,
Thursday, June 7, 2007
TELUS Convention Centre
Room: Macleod D
Chair: B. Sanders, University of Calgary
Abstract ID: BAPS.2007.DAMOP.G2.4
Abstract: G2.00004 : Mode-mashing and quantum interferometry with triphoton states
9:48 AM–10:24 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Aephraim Steinberg
(CQIQC \& Physics, University of Toronto)
For a number of years, many proposals have observed that the
resolution of
interferometry could be vastly improved, reaching the
``Heisenberg limit''
of $\Delta \phi \quad \approx $ 1/N, if the particles in the
interferometer
could be in a maximally entangled state of all travelling one
path or the
other, $\vert $N,0$>+\vert $0,N$>$, or ``N00N.'' This is a quadratic
improvement over the shot-noise limit in classical
interferometers, and
might lead to significant improvements in metrology, and possibly
even
lithography. Unfortunately, given the nearly non-interacting
nature of
photons, such states have proved elusive for N$>$2. Recently, a new
theoretical approach based on post-selective nonlinearity has
paved the way
to scalable generation of such states, which we have generated
for N=3.
In this talk, I review this approach, our experiment based on
what we term
``mode-mashing,'' and their future prospects and limitations. I
also discuss
the difficult issue of how to perform complete quantum
characterisations of
such multi-photon states, in which the particles are
distinguished only by
their polarisations, which are in a complicated entangled state.
We have
generalized the standard techniques of quantum tomography to take
into
account the potential presence of extra ``distinguishing''
information
inaccessible to measurement, and discuss the resulting
limitations on one's
ability to fully describe a quantum state. In the limit of
completely
indistinguishable photons, we argue that the N-photon object
should be
thought of essentially as a single composite spin-N/2 particle,
whose
polarisation state may be described by a generalized Wigner
quasiprobability
distribution over the classical phase space which is the surface
of the
Poincar\'{e} sphere. We generate a variety of coherent,
spin-squeezed, and
maximally entangled states, and show the resulting Wigner
functions and
density matrices.
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\textbf{References}
\newline
1. M.W. Mitchell, J.S. Lundeen, and A.M. Steinberg, Nature
\textbf{429}, 161
(2004)
\newline
2. R.B.A. Adamson, L.K. Shalm, M.W. Mitchell, and A.M. Steinberg,
Phys. Rev.
Lett. \textbf{98}, 043601 (2007)
\newline
3. R.B.A. Adamson, P.S. Turner, M.W. Mitchell, and A.M. Steinberg,
quant-ph/0612081
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2007.DAMOP.G2.4