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Published June 28, 2021 | Submitted + Supplemental Material + Published
Journal Article Open

Designing high-power, octave spanning entangled photon sources for quantum spectroscopy

Abstract

Entangled photon spectroscopy is a nascent field that has important implications for measurement and imaging across chemical, biology, and materials fields. Entangled photon spectroscopy potentially offers improved spatial and temporal-frequency resolutions, increased cross sections for multiphoton and nonlinear measurements, and new abilities in inducing or measuring quantum correlations. A critical step in enabling entangled photon spectroscopies is the creation of high-flux entangled sources that can use conventional detectors as well as provide redundancy for the losses in realistic samples. Here, we report a periodically poled, chirped, lithium tantalate platform that generates entangled photon pairs with ∼10⁻⁷ efficiency. For a near watt level diode laser, this results in a near μW-level flux. The single photon per mode limit that is necessary to maintain non-classical photon behavior is still satisfied by distributing this power over up to an octave-spanning bandwidth. The spectral–temporal photon correlations are observed via a Michelson-type interferometer that measures the broadband Hong–Ou–Mandel two-photon interference. A coherence time of 245 fs for a 10 nm bandwidth in the collinear case and a coherence time of 62 fs for a 125 nm bandwidth in the non-collinear case are measured using a CW pump laser and, essentially, collecting the full photon cone. We outline in detail the numerical methods used for designing and tailoring the entangled photons source, such as changing center wavelength or bandwidth, with the ultimate aim of increasing the availability of high-flux UV–Vis entangled photon sources in the optical spectroscopy community.

Additional Information

© 2021 The Author(s). Published under an exclusive license by AIP Publishing. Submitted: 9 April 2021; Accepted: 9 June 2021; Published Online: 23 June 2021. This paper is part of the JCP Special Topic on Quantum Light. This material is based on the work supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, under Award No. DE-SC0020151. DATA AVAILABILITY. The data that support the findings of this study are available within the article and its supplementary material.

Attached Files

Published - 5-0053688.pdf

Submitted - 2104-04656.pdf

Supplemental Material - supp_inf_final.pdf

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October 4, 2023
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