| Literature DB >> 26780858 |
Eliot Bolduc1, Genevieve Gariepy1, Jonathan Leach1.
Abstract
In quantum mechanics, predictions are made by way of calculating expectation values of observables, which take the form of Hermitian operators. Non-Hermitian operators, however, are not necessarily devoid of physical significance, and they can play a crucial role in the characterization of quantum states. Here we show that the expectation values of a particular set of non-Hermitian matrices, which we call column operators, directly yield the complex coefficients of a quantum state vector. We provide a definition of the state vector in terms of measurable quantities by decomposing these column operators into observables. The technique we propose renders very-large-scale quantum states significantly more accessible in the laboratory, as we demonstrate by experimentally characterizing a 100,000-dimensional entangled state. This represents an improvement of two orders of magnitude with respect to previous phase-and-amplitude characterizations of discrete entangled states.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26780858 PMCID: PMC4735685 DOI: 10.1038/ncomms10439
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Figure 1Measured and calculated properties of the two-photon state.
(a) We illustrate the complex state vector coefficients in matrix format. This representation is similar to that of an optical transfer matrix, where the lateral axes correspond to input and output modes. Here, each lateral axis corresponds to the spatial state of one photon of the pair. The OAM values range from −15 to 15. For a fixed OAM value, the radial index k ranges from 0 to 10, thus the combined state has 341 × 341 dimensions. The amplitude and phase values of a coefficient are given by the height and colour of a bar, respectively. For clarity, we darken the off-diagonal part. The small subset (b) of the state shows the phase gradient across the diagonal elements, which is typical of a Gouy phase shift, a common property of light passing through focus43. The corresponding calculated probability matrix (c) is consistent with the directly measured probabilities (e). Finally, we calculate the Schmidt decomposition (d) of b, which gives the joint basis in which the subset can be expressed with the lowest number of modes. The indices S1 and S2 correspond to the states of each photon in this basis.
Figure 2Generation and characterization of a two-photon field.
The entangled state is produced via SPDC in a PPKTP crystal and spatially separated by a prism. For the state determination stage, the crystal plane is imaged onto a SLM, which is in turn imaged to the input facet of two single-mode fibres. To make a given projective measurement, we display the corresponding joint mode on the SLM and measure the coincidence rate between the two single-photon avalanche diode detectors. The inset shows the five joint holograms that correspond to the column-operator decomposition of . The state vector coefficient is given by , where the expectation value of a given observable is proportional to the measured count rate when displaying the corresponding hologram.