Second-order coherence of microwave photons emitted by a quantum point contact
Fabian Hassler, Daniel Otten

TL;DR
This paper investigates the quantum statistical properties of microwave photons emitted by a biased quantum point contact, revealing nonclassical behavior and complex temperature-dependent coherence effects through second-order correlation analysis.
Contribution
It provides the first calculation of the second-order coherence function for microwave radiation from a quantum point contact, uncovering the interplay of Gaussian and non-Gaussian fluctuations affecting photon statistics.
Findings
At zero temperature, two-photon bunching is absent due to interference effects.
Low temperatures show competition between bunching and antibunching contributions.
Second-order coherence exhibits nonmonotonic behavior with a minimum at a specific time.
Abstract
Shot-noise of electrons that are transmitted with probability through a quantum point contact (biased at a voltage ) leads to a fluctuating current that in turn emits radiation in the microwave regime. By calculating the Fano factor for the case where only a single channel contributes to the transport, it has been shown that the radiation produced at finite frequency close to and at low temperatures is nonclassical with sub-Poissonian statistics (). The origin of this effect is the fermionic nature of the electrons producing the radiation, which reduces the probability of simultaneous emission of two or more photons. However, the Fano factor, being a time-averaged quantity, offers only limited information about the system. Here, we calculate the second-order coherence for this source of radiation. We show that due to the…
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