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Spontaneous parametric down-conversion

Spontaneous parametric down-conversion (also known as SPDC, parametric fluorescence or parametric scattering) is a nonlinear instant optical process that converts one photon of higher energy (namely, a pump photon), into a pair of photons (namely, a signal photon, and an idler photon) of lower energy, in accordance with the law of conservation of energy and law of conservation of momentum. It is an important process in quantum optics, for the generation of entangled photon pairs, and of single photons.

Schematic of SPDC process. Note that conservation laws are with respect to energy and momentum inside the crystal.

Basic process edit

 
An SPDC scheme with the Type I output
The video of an experiment showing vacuum fluctuations (in the red ring) amplified by SPDC (corresponding to the image above)

A nonlinear crystal is used to produce pairs of photons from a photon beam. In accordance with the law of conservation of energy and law of conservation of momentum, the pairs have combined energies and momenta equal to the energy and momentum of the original photon. Because the index of refraction changes with frequency (dispersion), only certain triplets of frequencies will be phase-matched so that simultaneous energy and momentum conservation can be achieved. Phase-matching is most commonly achieved using birefringent nonlinear materials, whose index of refraction changes with polarization. As a result of this, different types of SPDC are categorized by the polarizations of the input photon (the pump) and the two output photons (signal and idler). If the signal and idler photons share the same polarization with each other and with the destroyed pump photon it is deemed Type-0 SPDC;[1] if the signal and idler photons share the same polarization to each other, but are orthogonal to the pump polarization, it is Type-I SPDC; and if the signal and idler photons have perpendicular polarizations, it is deemed Type II SPDC.[2]

The conversion efficiency of SPDC is typically very low, with the highest efficiency obtained on the order of 4x10-6 incoming photons for PPLN in waveguides.[3] However, if one half of the pair is detected at any time then its partner is known to be present. The degenerate portion of the output of a Type I down converter is a squeezed vacuum that contains only even photon number terms. The nondegenerate output of the Type II down converter is a two-mode squeezed vacuum.

Example edit

 
An SPDC scheme with the Type II output

In a commonly used SPDC apparatus design, a strong laser beam, termed the "pump" beam, is directed at a BBO (beta-barium borate) or lithium niobate crystal. Most of the photons continue straight through the crystal. However, occasionally, some of the photons undergo spontaneous down-conversion with Type II polarization correlation, and the resultant correlated photon pairs have trajectories that are constrained along the sides of two cones whose axes are symmetrically arranged relative to the pump beam. Due to the conservation of momentum, the two photons are always symmetrically located on the sides of the cones, relative to the pump beam. In particular, the trajectories of a small proportion of photon pairs will lie simultaneously on the two lines where the surfaces of the two cones intersect. This results in entanglement of the polarizations of the pairs of photons emerging on those two lines. The photon pairs are in an equal weight quantum superposition of the unentangled states   and  , corresponding to polarizations of left-hand side photon, right-hand side photon. [4][5]: 205 

Another crystal is KDP (potassium dihydrogen phosphate) which is mostly used in Type I down conversion, where both photons have the same polarization.[6]

Some of the characteristics of effective parametric down-converting nonlinear crystals include:

  1. Nonlinearity: The refractive index of the crystal changes with the intensity of the incident light. This is known as the nonlinear optical response.
  2. Periodicity: The crystal has a regular, repeating structure. This is known as the lattice structure, which is responsible for the regular arrangement of the atoms in the crystal.
  3. Optical anisotropy: The crystal has different refractive indices along different crystallographic axes.
  4. Temperature and pressure sensitivity: The nonlinearity of the crystal can change with temperature and pressure, and thus the crystal should be kept in a stable temperature and pressure environment.
  5. High nonlinear coefficient: Large nonlinear coefficient is desirable, this allow to generate a high number of entangled photons.
  6. High optical damage threshold: Crystal with high optical damage threshold can endure high intensity of the pumping beam.
  7. Transparency in the desired wavelength range: It is important for the crystal to be transparent in the wavelength range of the pump beam for efficient nonlinear interactions
  8. High optical quality and low absorption: The crystal should be high optical quality and low absorption to minimize loss of the pump beam and the generated entangled photons.

History edit

SPDC was demonstrated as early as 1967 by S. E. Harris, M. K. Oshman, and R. L. Byer,[7] as well as by D. Magde and H. Mahr.[8] It was first applied to experiments related to coherence by two independent pairs of researchers in the late 1980s: Carroll Alley and Yanhua Shih, and Rupamanjari Ghosh and Leonard Mandel.[9][10] The duality between incoherent (Van Cittert–Zernike theorem) and biphoton emissions was found.[11]

Applications edit

SPDC allows for the creation of optical fields containing (to a good approximation) a single photon. As of 2005, this is the predominant mechanism for an experimenter to create single photons (also known as Fock states).[12] The single photons as well as the photon pairs are often used in quantum information experiments and applications like quantum cryptography and Bell test experiments.

SPDC is widely used to create pairs of entangled photons with a high degree of spatial correlation.[13] Such pairs are used in ghost imaging, in which information is combined from two light detectors: a conventional, multi-pixel detector that does not view the object, and a single-pixel (bucket) detector that does view the object.

Alternatives edit

The newly observed effect of two-photon emission from electrically driven semiconductors has been proposed as a basis for more efficient sources of entangled photon pairs.[14] Other than SPDC-generated photon pairs, the photons of a semiconductor-emitted pair usually are not identical but have different energies.[15] Until recently, within the constraints of quantum uncertainty, the pair of emitted photons were assumed to be co-located: they are born from the same location. However, a new nonlocalized mechanism for the production of correlated photon pairs in SPDC has highlighted that occasionally the individual photons that constitute the pair can be emitted from spatially separated points.[16][17]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Lerch, Stefan; Bessire, Bänz; Bernhard, Christof; Feurer, Thomas; Stefanov, André (2013-04-01). "Tuning curve of type-0 spontaneous parametric down-conversion". Journal of the Optical Society of America B. 30 (4): 953–958. arXiv:1404.1192. Bibcode:2013JOSAB..30..953L. doi:10.1364/JOSAB.30.000953. ISSN 0740-3224. S2CID 149192.
  2. ^ Boyd, Robert (2008). Nonlinear Optics, Third Edition. New York: Academic Press. pp. 79–88. ISBN 978-0-12-369470-6.
  3. ^ Bock, Matthias; Lenhard, Andreas; Chunnilall, Christopher; Becher, Christoph (17 October 2016). "Highly efficient heralded single-photon source for telecom wavelengths based on a PPLN waveguide". Optics Express. 24 (21): 23992–24001. Bibcode:2016OExpr..2423992B. doi:10.1364/OE.24.023992. ISSN 1094-4087. PMID 27828232.
  4. ^ P. Kwiat; et al. (1995). "New High-Intensity Source of Polarization-Entangled Photon Pairs". Phys. Rev. Lett. 75 (24): 4337–4341. Bibcode:1995PhRvL..75.4337K. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.75.4337. PMID 10059884.
  5. ^ Anton Zeilinger (12 October 2010). "The super-source and closing the communication loophole". Dance of the Photons: From Einstein to Quantum Teleportation. Farrar, Straus and Giroux. ISBN 978-1-4299-6379-4.
  6. ^ Reck, M H A, Quantum Interferometry with Multiports: Entangled Photons in Optical Fibers (page 115) (PDF), retrieved 16 February 2014
  7. ^ Harris, S. E.; Oshman, M. K.; Byer, R. L. (1967-05-01). "Observation of Tunable Optical Parametric Fluorescence". Physical Review Letters. 18 (18): 732–734. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.18.732.
  8. ^ Magde, Douglas; Mahr, Herbert (1967-05-22). "Study in Ammonium Dihydrogen Phosphate of Spontaneous Parametric Interaction Tunable from 4400 to 16 000 \AA{}". Physical Review Letters. 18 (21): 905–907. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.18.905.
  9. ^ Y. Shih and C. Alley, in Proceedings of the 2nd Int'l Symposium on Foundations of QM in Light of New Technology, Namiki et al., eds., Physical Society of Japan, Tokyo, 1986.
  10. ^ Ghosh, R.; Mandel, L. (1987). "Observation of Nonclassical Effects in the Interference of Two Photons". Phys. Rev. Lett. 59 (17): 1903–1905. Bibcode:1987PhRvL..59.1903G. doi:10.1103/physrevlett.59.1903. PMID 10035364.
  11. ^ http://pra.aps.org/abstract/PRA/v62/i4/e043816 - Duality between partial coherence and partial entanglement
  12. ^ Zavatta, Alessandro; Viciani, Silvia; Bellini, Marco (2004). "Tomographic reconstruction of the single-photon Fock state by high-frequency homodyne detection". Physical Review A. 70 (5): 053821. arXiv:quant-ph/0406090. Bibcode:2004PhRvA..70e3821Z. doi:10.1103/PhysRevA.70.053821. S2CID 119387795.
  13. ^ Walborn, S.P.; Monken, C.H.; Pádua, S.; Souto Ribeiro, P.H. (2010). "Spatial correlations in parametric down-conversion". Physics Reports. 495 (4–5): 87–139. arXiv:1010.1236. Bibcode:2010PhR...495...87W. doi:10.1016/j.physrep.2010.06.003. ISSN 0370-1573. S2CID 119221135.
  14. ^ Hayat, Alex; Ginzburg, Pavel; Orenstein, Meir (2008-03-02). "Observation of two-photon emission from semiconductors". Nature Photonics. 2 (4). Springer Science and Business Media LLC: 238–241. doi:10.1038/nphoton.2008.28. ISSN 1749-4885.
  15. ^ Chluba, J.; Sunyaev, R. A. (2006). "Induced two-photon decay of the 2s level and the rate of cosmological hydrogen recombination". Astronomy and Astrophysics. 446 (1): 39–42. arXiv:astro-ph/0508144. Bibcode:2006A&A...446...39C. doi:10.1051/0004-6361:20053988. S2CID 119526307.
  16. ^ Forbes, Kayn A.; Ford, Jack S.; Andrews, David L. (2017-03-30). "Nonlocalized Generation of Correlated Photon Pairs in Degenerate Down-Conversion" (PDF). Physical Review Letters. 118 (13): 133602. Bibcode:2017PhRvL.118m3602F. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.118.133602. PMID 28409956.
  17. ^ Forbes, Kayn A.; Ford, Jack S.; Jones, Garth A.; Andrews, David L. (2017-08-23). "Quantum delocalization in photon-pair generation" (PDF). Physical Review A. 96 (2): 023850. Bibcode:2017PhRvA..96b3850F. doi:10.1103/PhysRevA.96.023850.

spontaneous, parametric, down, conversion, also, known, spdc, parametric, fluorescence, parametric, scattering, nonlinear, instant, optical, process, that, converts, photon, higher, energy, namely, pump, photon, into, pair, photons, namely, signal, photon, idl. Spontaneous parametric down conversion also known as SPDC parametric fluorescence or parametric scattering is a nonlinear instant optical process that converts one photon of higher energy namely a pump photon into a pair of photons namely a signal photon and an idler photon of lower energy in accordance with the law of conservation of energy and law of conservation of momentum It is an important process in quantum optics for the generation of entangled photon pairs and of single photons Schematic of SPDC process Note that conservation laws are with respect to energy and momentum inside the crystal Contents 1 Basic process 2 Example 3 History 4 Applications 5 Alternatives 6 See also 7 ReferencesBasic process edit nbsp An SPDC scheme with the Type I output source source source source source source The video of an experiment showing vacuum fluctuations in the red ring amplified by SPDC corresponding to the image above A nonlinear crystal is used to produce pairs of photons from a photon beam In accordance with the law of conservation of energy and law of conservation of momentum the pairs have combined energies and momenta equal to the energy and momentum of the original photon Because the index of refraction changes with frequency dispersion only certain triplets of frequencies will be phase matched so that simultaneous energy and momentum conservation can be achieved Phase matching is most commonly achieved using birefringent nonlinear materials whose index of refraction changes with polarization As a result of this different types of SPDC are categorized by the polarizations of the input photon the pump and the two output photons signal and idler If the signal and idler photons share the same polarization with each other and with the destroyed pump photon it is deemed Type 0 SPDC 1 if the signal and idler photons share the same polarization to each other but are orthogonal to the pump polarization it is Type I SPDC and if the signal and idler photons have perpendicular polarizations it is deemed Type II SPDC 2 The conversion efficiency of SPDC is typically very low with the highest efficiency obtained on the order of 4x10 6 incoming photons for PPLN in waveguides 3 However if one half of the pair is detected at any time then its partner is known to be present The degenerate portion of the output of a Type I down converter is a squeezed vacuum that contains only even photon number terms The nondegenerate output of the Type II down converter is a two mode squeezed vacuum Example edit nbsp An SPDC scheme with the Type II output In a commonly used SPDC apparatus design a strong laser beam termed the pump beam is directed at a BBO beta barium borate or lithium niobate crystal Most of the photons continue straight through the crystal However occasionally some of the photons undergo spontaneous down conversion with Type II polarization correlation and the resultant correlated photon pairs have trajectories that are constrained along the sides of two cones whose axes are symmetrically arranged relative to the pump beam Due to the conservation of momentum the two photons are always symmetrically located on the sides of the cones relative to the pump beam In particular the trajectories of a small proportion of photon pairs will lie simultaneously on the two lines where the surfaces of the two cones intersect This results in entanglement of the polarizations of the pairs of photons emerging on those two lines The photon pairs are in an equal weight quantum superposition of the unentangled states H V displaystyle vert H rangle vert V rangle nbsp and V H displaystyle vert V rangle vert H rangle nbsp corresponding to polarizations of left hand side photon right hand side photon 4 5 205 Another crystal is KDP potassium dihydrogen phosphate which is mostly used in Type I down conversion where both photons have the same polarization 6 Some of the characteristics of effective parametric down converting nonlinear crystals include Nonlinearity The refractive index of the crystal changes with the intensity of the incident light This is known as the nonlinear optical response Periodicity The crystal has a regular repeating structure This is known as the lattice structure which is responsible for the regular arrangement of the atoms in the crystal Optical anisotropy The crystal has different refractive indices along different crystallographic axes Temperature and pressure sensitivity The nonlinearity of the crystal can change with temperature and pressure and thus the crystal should be kept in a stable temperature and pressure environment High nonlinear coefficient Large nonlinear coefficient is desirable this allow to generate a high number of entangled photons High optical damage threshold Crystal with high optical damage threshold can endure high intensity of the pumping beam Transparency in the desired wavelength range It is important for the crystal to be transparent in the wavelength range of the pump beam for efficient nonlinear interactions High optical quality and low absorption The crystal should be high optical quality and low absorption to minimize loss of the pump beam and the generated entangled photons History editSPDC was demonstrated as early as 1967 by S E Harris M K Oshman and R L Byer 7 as well as by D Magde and H Mahr 8 It was first applied to experiments related to coherence by two independent pairs of researchers in the late 1980s Carroll Alley and Yanhua Shih and Rupamanjari Ghosh and Leonard Mandel 9 10 The duality between incoherent Van Cittert Zernike theorem and biphoton emissions was found 11 Applications editSPDC allows for the creation of optical fields containing to a good approximation a single photon As of 2005 this is the predominant mechanism for an experimenter to create single photons also known as Fock states 12 The single photons as well as the photon pairs are often used in quantum information experiments and applications like quantum cryptography and Bell test experiments SPDC is widely used to create pairs of entangled photons with a high degree of spatial correlation 13 Such pairs are used in ghost imaging in which information is combined from two light detectors a conventional multi pixel detector that does not view the object and a single pixel bucket detector that does view the object Alternatives editThe newly observed effect of two photon emission from electrically driven semiconductors has been proposed as a basis for more efficient sources of entangled photon pairs 14 Other than SPDC generated photon pairs the photons of a semiconductor emitted pair usually are not identical but have different energies 15 Until recently within the constraints of quantum uncertainty the pair of emitted photons were assumed to be co located they are born from the same location However a new nonlocalized mechanism for the production of correlated photon pairs in SPDC has highlighted that occasionally the individual photons that constitute the pair can be emitted from spatially separated points 16 17 See also editPhoton upconversionReferences edit Lerch Stefan Bessire Banz Bernhard Christof Feurer Thomas Stefanov Andre 2013 04 01 Tuning curve of type 0 spontaneous parametric down conversion Journal of the Optical Society of America B 30 4 953 958 arXiv 1404 1192 Bibcode 2013JOSAB 30 953L doi 10 1364 JOSAB 30 000953 ISSN 0740 3224 S2CID 149192 Boyd Robert 2008 Nonlinear Optics Third Edition New York Academic Press pp 79 88 ISBN 978 0 12 369470 6 Bock Matthias Lenhard Andreas Chunnilall Christopher Becher Christoph 17 October 2016 Highly efficient heralded single photon source for telecom wavelengths based on a PPLN waveguide Optics Express 24 21 23992 24001 Bibcode 2016OExpr 2423992B doi 10 1364 OE 24 023992 ISSN 1094 4087 PMID 27828232 P Kwiat et al 1995 New High Intensity Source of Polarization Entangled Photon Pairs Phys Rev Lett 75 24 4337 4341 Bibcode 1995PhRvL 75 4337K doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 75 4337 PMID 10059884 Anton Zeilinger 12 October 2010 The super source and closing the communication loophole Dance of the Photons From Einstein to Quantum Teleportation Farrar Straus and Giroux ISBN 978 1 4299 6379 4 Reck M H A Quantum Interferometry with Multiports Entangled Photons in Optical Fibers page 115 PDF retrieved 16 February 2014 Harris S E Oshman M K Byer R L 1967 05 01 Observation of Tunable Optical Parametric Fluorescence Physical Review Letters 18 18 732 734 doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 18 732 Magde Douglas Mahr Herbert 1967 05 22 Study in Ammonium Dihydrogen Phosphate of Spontaneous Parametric Interaction Tunable from 4400 to 16 000 AA Physical Review Letters 18 21 905 907 doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 18 905 Y Shih and C Alley in Proceedings of the 2nd Int l Symposium on Foundations of QM in Light of New Technology Namiki et al eds Physical Society of Japan Tokyo 1986 Ghosh R Mandel L 1987 Observation of Nonclassical Effects in the Interference of Two Photons Phys Rev Lett 59 17 1903 1905 Bibcode 1987PhRvL 59 1903G doi 10 1103 physrevlett 59 1903 PMID 10035364 http pra aps org abstract PRA v62 i4 e043816 Duality between partial coherence and partial entanglement Zavatta Alessandro Viciani Silvia Bellini Marco 2004 Tomographic reconstruction of the single photon Fock state by high frequency homodyne detection Physical Review A 70 5 053821 arXiv quant ph 0406090 Bibcode 2004PhRvA 70e3821Z doi 10 1103 PhysRevA 70 053821 S2CID 119387795 Walborn S P Monken C H Padua S Souto Ribeiro P H 2010 Spatial correlations in parametric down conversion Physics Reports 495 4 5 87 139 arXiv 1010 1236 Bibcode 2010PhR 495 87W doi 10 1016 j physrep 2010 06 003 ISSN 0370 1573 S2CID 119221135 Hayat Alex Ginzburg Pavel Orenstein Meir 2008 03 02 Observation of two photon emission from semiconductors Nature Photonics 2 4 Springer Science and Business Media LLC 238 241 doi 10 1038 nphoton 2008 28 ISSN 1749 4885 Chluba J Sunyaev R A 2006 Induced two photon decay of the 2s level and the rate of cosmological hydrogen recombination Astronomy and Astrophysics 446 1 39 42 arXiv astro ph 0508144 Bibcode 2006A amp A 446 39C doi 10 1051 0004 6361 20053988 S2CID 119526307 Forbes Kayn A Ford Jack S Andrews David L 2017 03 30 Nonlocalized Generation of Correlated Photon Pairs in Degenerate Down Conversion PDF Physical Review Letters 118 13 133602 Bibcode 2017PhRvL 118m3602F doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 118 133602 PMID 28409956 Forbes Kayn A Ford Jack S Jones Garth A Andrews David L 2017 08 23 Quantum delocalization in photon pair generation PDF Physical Review A 96 2 023850 Bibcode 2017PhRvA 96b3850F doi 10 1103 PhysRevA 96 023850 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Spontaneous parametric down conversion amp oldid 1219084994, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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