Dynamical modeling of pulsed two-photon interference
Kevin A. Fischer, Kai M\"uller, Konstantinos G. Lagoudakis, and Jelena, Vu\v{c}kovi\'c

TL;DR
This paper develops a comprehensive numerical framework for characterizing pulsed single-photon sources, connecting quantum simulations, experimental data, and optical coherence to better understand non-ideal quantum light sources.
Contribution
It introduces a complete numerical method linking quantum Monte Carlo, experimental measures, and the quantum regression theorem for pulsed single-photon sources, including implementation in QuTiP.
Findings
Error probability relates to excitation pulse length in two-level systems.
Provides detailed relationships between source correlations and experimental interferometers.
Offers accessible simulation tools for analyzing non-ideal quantum light sources.
Abstract
Single-photon sources are at the heart of quantum-optical networks, with their uniquely quantum emission and phenomenon of two-photon interference allowing for the generation and transfer of nonclassical states. Although a few analytical methods have been briefly investigated for describing pulsed single-photon sources, these methods apply only to either perfectly ideal or at least extremely idealized sources. Here, we present the first complete picture of pulsed single-photon sources by elaborating how to numerically and fully characterize non-ideal single-photon sources operating in a pulsed regime. In order to achieve this result, we make the connection between quantum Monte--Carlo simulations, experimental characterizations, and an extended form of the quantum regression theorem. We elaborate on how an ideal pulsed single-photon source is connected to its photocount distribution and…
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