Massively Parallel Coincidence Counting of High-Dimensional Entangled States
Matthew Reichert, Hugo Defienne, and Jason W. Fleischer

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel, high-speed, parallel detection method using CCD cameras to measure high-dimensional entangled quantum states, significantly advancing quantum imaging and communication capabilities.
Contribution
It develops and experimentally demonstrates a comprehensive detection theory for CCD cameras that enables rapid, high-dimensional quantum state measurement, overcoming previous scalability limitations.
Findings
Achieved measurement of a 10^12 dimensional joint Hilbert space.
Realized nearly 10,000-fold speed-up over traditional measurement methods.
Validated the theory with experimental results on entangled photon pairs.
Abstract
Quantum entangled states of light are essential for quantum technologies and fundamental tests of physics. While quantum information science has relied on systems with entanglement in 2D degrees of freedom, e.g. quantum bits with polarization states, the field is moving towards ever-higher dimensions of entanglement. Increasing the dimensionality enhances the channel capacity and security of quantum communication protocols, gives rise to exponential speed-up of quantum computation, and is necessary for quantum imaging. Yet, characterization of even bipartite quantum states of high-dimensional entanglement remains a prohibitively time-consuming challenge, as the dimensionality of the joint Hilbert space scales quadratically with the number of modes. Here, we develop and experimentally demonstrate a new, more complete theory of detection in CCD cameras for rapid measurement of the full…
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