Quantifying information via Shannon entropy in spatially structured optical beams
Maria Solyanik-Gorgone, Jiachi Ye, Mario Miscuglio, Andrei Afanasev,, Alan Willner, Volker J. Sorger

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel way to quantify information in structured optical beams using Shannon entropy and the Wigner distribution, validated experimentally across various laser modes, enhancing understanding of optical information content.
Contribution
It proposes a new definition of classical Shannon information based on the Wigner distribution, applicable to complex laser modes, and experimentally validates this approach.
Findings
Quantifies information in structured laser modes using Wigner distribution
Experimental validation through Wigner function reconstruction
Applicable to any laser mode with well-behaved functions
Abstract
While information is ubiquitously generated, shared, and analyzed in a modern-day life, there is still some controversy around the ways to asses the amount and quality of information inside a noisy optical channel. A number of theoretical approaches based on, e.g., conditional Shannon entropy and Fisher information have been developed, along with some experimental validations. Some of these approaches are limited to a certain alphabet, while others tend to fall short when considering optical beams with non-trivial structure, such as Hermite-Gauss, Laguerre-Gauss and other modes with non-trivial structure. Here, we propose a new definition of classical Shannon information via the Wigner distribution function, while respecting the Heisenberg inequality. Following this definition, we calculate the amount of information in a Gaussian, Hermite-Gaussian, and Laguerre-Gaussian laser modes in…
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