An introduction to Quantum Optics
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Transcript of An introduction to Quantum Optics
An introduction to Quantum Optics
T. Coudreau
Laboratoire Kastler Brossel, UMR CNRS 8552 et Université Pierre et Marie Curie, PARIS, France
also with Pôle Matériaux et Phénomènes Quantiques, Fédération de Recherche CNRS 2437 et Université Denis Diderot , PARIS, France
Why a course on quantum optics ?
• Quantum optics are concerned with the statistics of the
electromagnetic field (variance, correlation functions …)
• The statistics give an idea on the nature of the source :
thermal, poissonian...
• The statistics may give an idea on the basic properties of
astrophysical sources
»www.astro.lu.se/~dainis
Outline
• Historical approach
» Electromagnetism
» Planck and Einstein
» Quantum Mechanics
» Quantum Electrodynamics
» Conclusive experiments
• Statistical properties of light
• Quantum optics with OPOs
Introduction
Does light consist in waves or particles ?
• 17th century : Newton particle• 19th century : Fresnel, Maxwell...
wave• 1900s : Planck, Einstein particle• 1920s : Quantum mechanics• 1950s : Quantum Electrodynamics• 1960s : Quantum Optics
XIX th century
• Young (~1800) : interferences, a light wave can be added or substracted
»Sinusoïdal wave• Fresnel (1814-20) : Mathematical theory of diffraction
and interferences»Scalar wave
• Fresnel - Arago (1820-30) : polarization phenomena»Transverse vectorial wave
• Faraday - Maxwell (1850-64) : light as an electromagnetic phenomena
»wave with with
Everything is understood but...
Some problems remain
• The spectral behaviour of black body radiation is not understood :
»why the decrease at high frequency ?
• Position of spectral lines
Some more problems...
• Photoelectric effect (Hertz and Hallwachs, 1887)
»UV light removes charges on the surface while a visible light does not
Planck : energy exchange occur with multiples of Bohr : atomic energy levels
Light is made of particles
• Light is made of unbreakable “quanta” of energy (Einstein 1905)
This was later checked by Millikan
• The Compton effect (1923)
The particle (“photon”) possesses a given momentum
• Photomultiplier :
light can be seen as a photon current
pulses
Interferences and photons
Taylor (1909) : Young's slits with an attenuated source
Exposure time"each photon then interferes only with itself”, Dirac
("a candle burning at a distance slightly exceeding a mile”)
Photographic plate
• Complete quantum theory of matter : energy levels, atomic collisions
• Atom-field interaction :
Classical electromagnetic wave Quantum atom
« Semi classical theory :»Energy transfers only by units of »Momentum transfers by units of
Quantum mechanics (~1925)
Consequences of the semiclassical theory
• Photoelectric, Compton effects can be understood with a classical wave
• Pulses recorded in the photomultiplier are due to quantum jumps inside the material and not to the granular structure of lightsame for the photographic plate in Taylor ’s experiment
Light remains a classical electromagnetic wave
» Should Einstein be deprived of his (only) Nobel prize ?
» And Compton ?
Quantum electrodynamics (1925-30)
• Quantum calculations are applied to light in the absence of matter
• In the case of a monochromatic light, the energy is quantified :
» contains n photons (quanta) : En
» contains 0 photons (quanta) : E0
(Vacuum, absence of radiation, fundamental state of the system)
Consequence on the electric field
• Existence of an Heisenberg inequality analogous to
(for a monochromatic wave)
Consequences» There is no null field at all moments (see “there is no
particle at rest”)» The electromagnetic field in vacuum is not identically
null
The field is null only on average : existence of vacuum fluctuations
Consequence on atomic levels
• Excited levels of atoms are unstable
• Through a quadratic Stark effect, the vacuum fluctuations displace the excited levels ("Lamb shift").
• Reasons
1) Problem of interpretation
2) Problem of formalism : many diverging quantities
e.g. Vacuum energy :
3) Problem of "concurrence" : the more simple semiclassical
theory gives (generally) the same results
• 2) was solved in 1947 (Feynman, Schwinger & Tomonaga) :
QED serves as a base and model for all modern theoretical
physics (elementary particles…)
QED remains a marginal theory (1930-47)
Toward new experiments
• Large success of quantum electrodynamics to predict properties of matter “in the presence of vacuum”.
» Agreement between theory and experiment 10-9
• Progress in optical techniques
» lasers
» better detectors
» non linear optics
Difference between wave and corpuscle
A crucial experiment : the semitransparent plate
Wave Continuous
Unlocalised, breakable
PhotonsDiscontinuous
Localised, unbreakable
50% reflected
50% transmitted
(1)
(2)
The plate does not cut the photon in two !
Experimental result
But a very faint source does not produce a true one photon state :
the beam is a superposition of different states, e.g.
A faint source does not give a clear result
(1)
(2)
Prodution of a state
A single dipole (atom, ion…) emits a single photon at a time
Kimble, Dagenais and Mandel, Phys. Rev. Lett. 39 691 (1977)
First experimental proof of the particle nature of light
One photon interference
Grangier et al., Europhys. Lett 1 173(1986)
Ca beamTo MZ1
To MZ2
Non linear optics experiments
• With a pump at frequency 0, the crystal generates twin photons at frequencies 1 and 2.
There is a perfect correlation between the two channels
• Furthermore, the system behaves as an efficient source of single photon states :
the resulting light cannot be described by two classical waves emitted by a crystal described quantically
Interferences with twin beams
No interference fringes : the crystal does not produce classical beams but
Perfect anticorrelations at zero phase shift
Hong, Ou and Mandel,Phys. Rev. Lett. 59 2044 (1987)
Value predicted by classical theory
Particle interpretation
(2) and (4) give which is not verified experimentally
the crystal does not produce classical particles
(1) (2) (3) (4)
What have we learned ?
• Light can behave like a classical wave
» Classical interferences
• Light can behave like a classical particle
» One photon interferences
• Light can behave like a non classical state
» Two photon interferences
Non Locality in Quantum Mechanics
•1935 (A. Einstein, B. Podolsky, and N. Rosen, Phys. Rev. 47, 777
(1935) ) : Einstein, Podolski and Rosen worry about the non-local character of quantum mechanics.
Space
Time
A
B
A and B measure the spin of particles 1 and 2 along a given axis.
is there a “supertheory” (hidden variables) ?
source
magnet A
magnet B
If the two observers choose the same axis, they get an opposite result but if they choose different axis, can they measure simultaneously orthogonal directions ?
Bell inequalities (1)
1965 (J. S. Bell, Physics 1, 195 (1965). ) : J.S Bell proposes a way to discriminate between a local hidden variables theory and quantum theory.
One assumes that the experimental result depends on a “hidden variable” and on the magnets orientations but not on the other measurement :
The classical probability to obtain a given result is given by
While the quantum theory prediction is written
Bell inequalities (2)a
bcsource
a
bc
A B
Sa Sb Sc
+ + ++ + -+ - +- + ++ - -- + -- - +- - -
Sa Sb Sc
- - -- - +- + -+ - -- + ++ - ++ + -+ + +
Classical, hidden variable theory predicts
P(SaSb)+P(Sb Sc)+P(ScSa) = 1 + 2(P1+P8) 1while Quantum Mechanics predicts :
P(SiSj) = cos2(60°) = 1/4 so that
P(SaSb)+P(Sb Sc)+P(ScSa) = 3/4 < 1!
“Bell inequalities” enable us to discriminateAmong the first experiments : A. Aspect, P. Grangier, and G. Roger, Phys. Rev. Lett. 49, 91 (1982).
P 1
P 2
P 3
P 4
P 5
P 6
P 7
P 8
Non locality tests with non linear media
Non local correlations exist !They do not allow superluminous transfer of information
A
B
Experimental result :
Weihs et al. performed an experiment using parametric down conversion and detectors 400 m apartWeihs et al., Phys. Rev. Lett 81, 5039(1998)
QED : an accepted theory
All measurement results (up to now) are in agreement with the predictions of quantum electrodynamics
(including experiments of measurement and control of quantum fluctuations)
No more mysteries the actual theory explains without ambiguity all
phenomena but still "strange" behaviours• Physical images
» several may work wave and particle» only one works wave or particle» none works neither wave nor particle» Vacuum fluctuations» Path interferences
Statistical properties of sources (1)
Different sources, single atoms, nonlinear crystals, … are able to generate different types of fields.What should we study ?
The statistical properties of the field
The properties of statistical variables are described by
• Photon number probability distributions
• 2nd order moment : 2nd order coherence
(1st order = interference)
• Spontaneous emission by a single dipole (atom, ion, …)
• variance and photon number distribution : depend on pumping• antibunching
• Spontaneous emission by an incoherent ensemble of dipoles (Thermal / chaotic light)
•
• • bunching(Hanbury Brown & Twiss)
Statistical properties of sources (2)
Statistical properties of sources (3)
• Laser field (stimulated emission inside an optical cavity)
• Poissonian distribution
• •
• N photon state
• • •
Quantum correlations with an OPO
At the output of an OPO, the signal and idler beams have quantumintensity correlations.
Heidmann et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 59, 2555 (1987)
Result : 30 % noise reduction(now : over 85 %)
Conclusion
•No more mysteries QED explains without ambiguity all phenomena
but still "strange" behaviours• The results depend on the quantum state of the field
– Vacuum– n photons– statistical mixture
• Statistical properties of light give an insight on the properties of the emitting object
• OPOs provide an efficient source of non classical light