Quantum Imaging with Undetected Photons

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Presentation transcript:

Quantum Imaging with Undetected Photons Gabriela Barreto Lemos

Quantum Interference “A phenomenon which is impossible, absolutely impossible, to explain in any classical way, and which has in it the heart of quantum mechanics.” – Feynman

Quantum Interference “A phenomenon which is impossible, absolutely impossible, to explain in any classical way, and which has in it the heart of quantum mechanics.” – Feynman

Two Spontaneous Parametric Down-Conversion sources Can the yellow paths interfere? Two Spontaneous Parametric Down-Conversion sources Beam splitter detector Measurement in singles, but information would be present in coincidences! Laser NO! Because d and f carry information as to where the detected yellow photon came from

Can the yellow paths interfere? "In quantum mechanics interference is always a manifestation of the intrinsic indistinguishability of the photon paths, in which case the corresponding probability amplitudes add. " Can the yellow paths interfere? Measurement in singles, but information would be present in coincidences! NO coincidence detections! (A)|T|=0.91 (B)|T|=0 Only one pair of photons is generated! This is NOT two photon interference! Zou, Wang, Mandel, Phys Rev. Lett. 67, 318 (1991)

Induced Coherence without Induced Emission 1 3 2 4

Phases Indistinguishability: La+Ld=Lb Lc –Ld - Lf = Le –Lf Lc - Ld = Le

When is interference due to induced emission and when is it due to indistinguishability of quantum transition paths? T V Measurement in singles, but information would be present in coincidences! T Indistinguishability Induced emission Ic and Ie don’t depend on T Ie depends on T V = T Wiseman and Molmer, Physics Letters A, 270, 245 (2000)

Quantum Ghost Imaging Image : two-photon correlations (coincidence counts). First implementation with position momentum entangled photons: T. B. Pittman, Y. H. Shih, D.V. Strekalov, and A.V. Sergienko, Phys. Rev. A 52, R3429 (1995).

White, A. G. , Mitchell, J. R. , Nairz, O. & Kwiat, P. G White, A. G., Mitchell, J. R., Nairz, O. & Kwiat, P. G. ‘‘Interaction-free’’ imaging. Phys. Rev. A 58, 605–613 (1998).

Quantum imaging with Undetected Photons GBL, V. Borish, S. Ramelow, G. Cole, R. Lapkiewicz, A. Zeilinger Nature, vol. 512, p. 409 (2014) No coincidence detections are necessary! EMCCD EMCCD

Transverse “position” basis Hilbert space describing transverse degrees of freedom of single photon is spanned by the basis. An arbitrary pure state is Distinguishable particles. Paraxial photons! One photon state Transverse Spatial Wave-Function Two photon state

Transverse “position” basis Imaging Transverse “position” basis Hilbert space describing transverse degrees of freedom of single photon is spanned by the basis. An arbitrary pure state is Distinguishable particles. Paraxial photons! SPDC state Object

532nm (pump) 810nm (detected) + 1550nm (undetected) Quantum imaging with Undetected Photons 532nm (pump) 810nm (detected) + 1550nm (undetected) EMCCD

Transverse position dependent “which-source” information Absorption imaging Transverse position dependent “which-source” information Singles 810nm counts at each output Cardboard cutout ~78% visibility Sum of the outputs Diffference of the outputs signal beams are not absorbed at all by the mask: important difference to other interferometers

Phase imaging of an opaque object Phase imaging of an etched silicon plate (opaque to detected photons) Phase imaging of an opaque object Singles 810nm counts at each output Phase is a property of the bi-photon state Emerging undetected idler amplitude has a random phase and does not carry the image!

Phase imaging of an invisible object Etched SiO2 2 step at detection wavelength step at illumination wavelength

Now detecting idler and signal: interaction free measurement: P=0.25 Extendable to higher probabilities? A. C. Elitzur, and L. Vaidman, Found. Phys. 23, 987 (1993). White, A. G., Mitchell, J. R., Nairz, O. & Kwiat, P. G. ‘‘Interaction-free’’ imaging. Phys. Rev. A 58, 605–613 (1998). P. Kwiat, H. Weinfurter, T. Herzog, A. Zeilinger, and M. Kasevich, Phys. Rev. Lett. 74, 4763 (1995).

Spectroscopy with undetected photons The same “imaging” idea can be extended from transverse spatial domain to the spectral domain Spectrometer Singles counts Singles counts λ λ Constructive and destructive interference with 1550 nm (FWHM 3nm) bandpass filter placed in the undetected idler path

Object of length L and refractive index gives a phase shift of Spectral Fringes Obtaining the depth or index of refraction of an object using undetected photons Spectrometer Object of length L and refractive index gives a phase shift of λ

Summary We have shown that information can be extracted about an object without detecting the photons that interacted with it. We can realise grey scale imaging with the same setup. It can be used to realise interaction-free imaging. We can exploit other photonic degrees of freedom. For example, spectrum. We have seen in single photon detections information that is in fact contained in the bi-photon correlations (phase imaging). What/how much information contained belonging to the bi-photon can be accessed by detecting only one of the systems?