Theory of Quantum Path Entanglement and Interference with Multiplane Diffraction of Classical Light Sources
Burhan Gulbahar

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel theoretical framework for quantum path entanglement and interference in multiplane diffraction of classical light, highlighting their potential as scalable quantum resources for computation and communication.
Contribution
It develops a new operator theory model for quantum path entanglement and interference in multiplane diffraction, demonstrating their properties and potential applications.
Findings
Leggett--Garg inequality is violated in MPD setups.
Quantum path entanglement and interference are identified as new quantum resources.
The theory suggests scalable quantum computation and communication applications.
Abstract
Quantum history states were recently formulated by extending the consistent histories approach of Griffiths to the entangled superposition of evolution paths and were then experimented with Greenberger--Horne--Zeilinger states. Tensor product structure of history-dependent correlations was also recently exploited as a quantum computing resource in simple linear optical setups performing multiplane diffraction (MPD) of fermionic and bosonic particles with remarkable promises. This significantly motivates the definition of quantum histories of MPD as entanglement resources with the inherent capability of generating an exponentially increasing number of Feynman paths through diffraction planes in a scalable manner and experimental low complexity combining the utilization of coherent light sources and photon-counting detection. In this article, quantum temporal correlation and interference…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Information and Cryptography · Photonic and Optical Devices · Optical Network Technologies
