Phase-space interference of states optically truncated by quantum scissors: Generation of distinct superpositions of qudit coherent states by displacement of vacuum
Adam Miranowicz, Malgorzata Paprzycka, Anirban Pathak, Franco Nori

TL;DR
This paper explores the generation and properties of qudit coherent states created through optical truncation and displacement, revealing interference effects and nonclassical features in phase space.
Contribution
It introduces a comparative analysis of two definitions of qudit coherent states and demonstrates high-fidelity generation of macroscopic superpositions with distinct photon number characteristics.
Findings
Superpositions contain only odd or even photon numbers depending on qudit dimension
Interference effects are visible in phase-space Wigner functions
States exhibit significant nonclassicality measurable via Wigner function volume
Abstract
Conventional Glauber coherent states (CS) can be defined in several equivalent ways, e.g., by displacing the vacuum or, explicitly, by their infinite Poissonian expansion in Fock states. It is well known that these definitions become inequivalent if applied to finite -level systems (qudits). We present a comparative Wigner-function description of the qudit CS defined (i) by the action of the truncated displacement operator on the vacuum and (ii) by the Poissonian expansion in Fock states of the Glauber CS truncated at -photon Fock state. These states can be generated from a classical light by its optical truncation using nonlinear and linear quantum scissors devices, respectively. We show a surprising effect that a macroscopically distinguishable superposition of two qudit CS (according to both definitions) can be generated with high fidelity by displacing the vacuum in the…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
