Number 655 #1, September 26, 2003 by Phil Schewe, James Riordon, and Ben Stein
An Ultrabright Tunable Photon-Pair Source
An ultrabright tunable photon-pair source created at MIT is the best
generator so far of entangled photon pairs, a development which should
help quantum communications systems to do their job more smoothly. Entangled
photons possess a special correlation unlike anything in classical physics:
if, say, we measure the spin (polarization) of one photon, then we automatically
know the polarization of the other photon, even though it might be on
the other side of the galaxy and even if, until the moment of measurement,
the spins of both photons had been indeterminate. This weird property
of quantum reality, it is hoped, will be a boon to encryption (perhaps
in a "quantum teleportation" scheme - see Physics News Update
350)
and future quantum computers. Indeed, for some time now quantum effects
have been an important factor in communications engineering applications,
especially insofar as quantum fluctuations (uncertainty in our knowledge
of where an electron is or the value of its energy) can produce levels
of electrical noise that can limit the effectiveness of practical devices.
The use of entangled photons might be able to mitigate this problem.
Quantum limitations are already a problem in such devices as optical
amplifiers (whose amplified spontaneous emission noise limits communication
performance) or soliton pulses (supposedly non-dispersing light pulses
that are subject to quantum-induced timing jitter accumulation) used
in fiber-optic communications. MIT's Research Laboratory of Electronics
is a place where quantum aspects of electrical engineering are taken
very seriously. The head of the lab, Jeffrey
H. Shapiro (617-253-4179), will report on progress in a program
aimed at developing a system for long-distance, high-fidelity teleportation
of photon states at the upcoming Frontiers in Optics meeting of the
Optical Society of America. As part of this work the MIT team has developed
a source of entangled photons some ten times brighter than previous
sources. The correlated photons are engendered by shooting a laser beam
into a nonlinear optical crystal, where incoming photons are, in effect,
split into two related photons of half the wavelength. This "down-conversion"
process is even tunable over a certain wavelength range. Up to 12,000
photon pairs per second per milliwatt of input power have been produced.
(Paper MI3, OSA meeting 5-9 October in Tucson, AZ; meeting
website)