Quantum Phase Imaging using Spatial Entanglement
Chien-Hung Lu, Matthew Reichert, Xiaohang Sun, and Jason W. Fleischer

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates quantum phase imaging using spatial entanglement of photon pairs captured directly with an electron-multiplying CCD, enabling high-resolution, nonlocal, and efficient phase measurements surpassing classical limits.
Contribution
It introduces a novel direct imaging method for collinear entangled photons, replacing traditional coincidence counting, and demonstrates near Heisenberg-limited phase measurement.
Findings
Quantum nonlocality enhances phase sensitivity.
Direct imaging with CCD is effective for quantum phase measurements.
Achieved near Heisenberg-limited phase sensitivity.
Abstract
Entangled photons have the remarkable ability to be more sensitive to signal and less sensitive to noise than classical light. Joint photons can sample an object collectively, resulting in faster phase accumulation and higher spatial resolution, while common components of noise can be subtracted. Even more, they can accomplish this while physically separate, due to the nonlocal properties of quantum mechanics. Indeed, nearly all quantum optics experiments rely on this separation, using individual point detectors that are scanned to measure coincidence counts and correlations. Scanning, however, is tedious, time consuming, and ill-suited for imaging. Moreover, the separation of beam paths adds complexity to the system while reducing the number of photons available for sampling, and the multiplicity of detectors does not scale well for greater numbers of photons and higher orders of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDigital Holography and Microscopy · Quantum Information and Cryptography · Random lasers and scattering media
