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Researchers find new multiphoton effect in the quantum interference of light

Researchers find new multiphoton effect in the quantum interference of light

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Artistic representation of quantum interference between a thermal state and a heralded parametric single-photon state Artistic representation of quantum interference between a thermal state and a heralded parametric single-photon state Artistic representation of quantum interference between a thermal state and a heralded parametric single-photon state
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Artistic representation of quantum interference between a thermal state and a heralded parametric single-photon state

Prof. Dr. Michael Kues and doctoral student Anahita Khodadad Kashi disproved previously valid assumptions with their newly developed model and experimental verification.

An international team of researchers from Leibniz University Hannover (Germany) and the University of Strathclyde in Glasgow (United Kingdom) has disproved a previously held assumption about the impact of multiphoton components in interference effects of thermal fields (e.g. sunlight) and parametric single photons (generated in non-linear crystals). "We experimentally proved that the interference effect between thermal light and parametric single photons also leads to quantum interference with the background field. For this reason, the background cannot simply be neglected and subtracted from calculations, as has been the case up to now," says Prof. Dr. Michael Kues, Head of the Institute of Photonics and member of the Board of the PhoenixD Cluster of Excellence at Leibniz University Hannover.

The leading scientist was PhD student Anahita Khodadad Kashi, who performs research on photonic quantum information processing at the Institute of Photonics. She investigated how the visibility of the so-called Hong-Ou-Mandel effect, a quantum interference effect, is affected by multiphoton contamination. "With our experiment, we have disproved the previously valid assumption that multiphoton components would only impair visibility and can therefore be subtracted in the calculation," says Khodadad Kashi and continues: "We have discovered a new fundamental characteristic that was not considered in previous calculations. Our newly developed model can predict the quantum interference and we can measure this effect in an experiment."

How new knowledge is created

The scientists came across their discovery while carrying out an experiment in the laser laboratory. They obtained a negative result when they initially followed the original calculation method. "But the result would have been physically impossible," says Khodadad Kashi. Together, the team began troubleshooting the experimental setup and the calculation model.

"When an experiment turns out very different from what is expected, scientists start questioning previous assumptions and look for new explanations," says Kues. They jointly developed their new theory of quantum interference of thermal fields with parametric single photons. Quantum researcher Lucia Caspani from the University of Strathclyde in Glasgow was the first to test the approach. As the next step, Khodadad Kashi presented her theory and the experimental results at international conferences, including Photonics West in San Francisco, the world's largest specialist conference for optics and photonics, attracting around 22,000 participants. There, she discussed her model with other scientists and received confirmation of her results. The journal Physical Review Letters has now published the team's research.

With the new theory and the experimental verification, Kues' team has made an important contribution to a better understanding of quantum phenomena. “The findings could be important for quantum key distribution, which is necessary for secure communications in the future, specifically how quantum interference effects are interpreted for the generation of secret keys,” says Khodadad Kashi. However, many questions remain unanswered, says Kues: "Little research has been done into multiphoton effects, so a lot of work is still needed."

The research was supported by the European Research Council within the Starting-Grant-Project QFreC. Prof. Dr. Michael Kues is head of the Institute of Photonics and a board member of the Cluster of Excellence PhoenixD: Photonics, Optics, and Engineering - Innovation across Disciplines at Leibniz University Hannover, Germany. The PhoenixD research cluster comprises around 120 scientists working on novel integrated optics. The German Research Foundation (DFG) funds PhoenixD with about 52 million euros from 2019 to 2025.

 

Original article

Anahita Khodadad Kashi, Lucia Caspani, and Michael Kues
Spectral Hong-Ou-Mandel Effect between a Heralded Single-Photon State and a Thermal Field: Multiphoton Contamination and the Nonclassicality Threshold
Physical Review Letters 131, 233601 

 

https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.131.233601

 


Note to Editors:
For further information, please contact Prof. Dr. Michael Kues
(phone: +49 511 762 3539; email: michael.kues@iop.uni-hannover.de)

and visit www.iop.uni-hannover.de and www.phoenixd.uni-hannover.de.