Scientists Make the First Real-Time Monitoring of Multimode Squeezed Light in Quantum Optics
Researchers from the Max Planck Institute for the Science of Light and its international partners have achieved the first real-time monitoring of multimode squeezing, marking a significant advancement for quantum information science. This accomplishment breaks through a long-standing barrier to the characterization of high-dimensional quantum states and has the potential to transform everything from fault-tolerant quantum computing to quantum metrology.
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The Post-Processing Era’s End
Homodyne detection (HD) has long been the gold standard for quantifying quantum light. Because HD depends on a local oscillator that specifies a single detected mode, it is intrinsically restricted to single-mode operation despite its effectiveness. In the past, scientists had to deal with each mode individually or rely on laborious, complicated post-processing in order to obtain data from numerous modes. These techniques were extremely sensitive to detection losses in addition to being ineffective.
The group, under the direction of Mahmoud Kalash and Maria Chekhova, used multimode optical parametric amplification (MOPA) to get around these limitations. A MOPA may concurrently amplify several spatial and spectral modes, in contrast to conventional techniques. The researchers improved the detection mechanism loss-tolerant by amplifying the light sufficiently, which allowed them to carry out intricate procedures like mode sorting following amplification without losing the sensitive quantum signals.
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Unprecedented Squeezing Performance
A 3 mm bismuth triborate (BiBO) crystal was used in the experiment to create and intensify a multimode compressed vacuum. Mode matching, or making sure the geometries of the amplifier’s modes precisely matched those of the compressed light, was a crucial experimental problem. To counteract the angular widening brought on by the high gain, the researchers shaped the amplifier’s pump beam and increased its waist to 145 µm. With this modification, the basic mode’s overlap increased to more than 85%.
The researchers successfully monitored nine spatial modes concurrently in real-time by sorting the co-propagating modes using a spatial light modulator (SLM). They found the maximum level of squeezing yet measured for pulsed light, -7.9 ± 0.6 dB, in the fundamental mode. Additionally, the amplification stage guaranteed that the measured modes retained excellent purity, ranging from 63% to 78%, despite the intrinsically lossy character of mode sorting.
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Creating the Basis for Quantum Computers
This method offers a potent tool for creating and characterizing cluster states, which are the essential building blocks for continuous-variable quantum computing, going beyond straightforward measurement. Interconnected “nodes” of light that share quantum entanglement make up cluster states.
The capacity to concurrently monitor the entanglement witnesses of 36 distinct two-node cluster states was proven by the researchers. The group confirmed entanglement across several mode pairings in real-time by looking at the “nullifiers”—certain quadrature combinations that show quantum connections. They calculated that these states may achieve squeezing levels of up to -7.9 dB and even expanded their investigation to bigger three-, four-, and five-node clusters.
Quantum Technology’s Scalable Future
This work’s ramifications go much beyond the nine modes that were identified in the lab. The researchers stress that their configuration already produces an effective 50 spatial modes, and by widening the pump beams even further, this number might be increased to hundreds.
The authors said that “this work completes the set of capabilities needed for robust multimode squeezed light detection,” and they added that nonlinear frequency conversion might be used to apply the method to the frequency domain. The development of ultra-secure communication systems based on quantum key distribution and large-scale quantum networks depends on this scalability.
This MOPA-based method unlocks the full potential of high-dimensional quantum technologies and brings them closer to useful, real-world applications by allowing the dynamic control and feedback of many quantum channels simultaneously.
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