The Hong-Ou-Mandel effect with atoms
A. M. Kaufman, M. C. Tichy, F. Mintert, A. M. Rey, and C. A. Regal

TL;DR
This paper reviews the observation and implications of the Hong-Ou-Mandel effect with atoms, highlighting its potential to advance quantum information and fundamental physics by extending photon-based techniques to atomic systems.
Contribution
It discusses recent experiments demonstrating HOM interference with atoms and explores new applications and perspectives in quantum control and entanglement of atomic particles.
Findings
HOM interference observed with atomic sources.
Atomic HOM experiments enable new quantum information protocols.
Potential for improved probes of entanglement and quantum correlations.
Abstract
Controlling light at the level of individual photons has led to advances in fields ranging from quantum information and precision sensing to fundamental tests of quantum mechanics. A central development that followed the advent of single photon sources was the observation of the Hong-Ou- Mandel (HOM) effect, a novel two-photon path interference phenomenon experienced by indistinguishable photons. The effect is now a central technique in the field of quantum optics, harnessed for a variety of applications such as diagnosing single photon sources and creating probabilistic entanglement in linear quantum computing. Recently, several distinct experiments using atomic sources have realized the requisite control to observe and exploit Hong-Ou-Mandel interference of atoms. This article provides a summary of this phenomenon and discusses some of its implications for atomic systems.…
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