Nonequilibrium Hanbury-Brown-Twiss experiment: Theory and application to binary stars
Adrian E. Rubio Lopez, Ashwin K. Boddeti, Fanglin Bao, Hyunsoo Choi, and Zubin Jacob

TL;DR
This paper develops a theoretical framework for intensity interferometry of objects at different temperatures, applying it to binary stars to estimate their radii, distances, and temperatures with feasible near-term experiments.
Contribution
It generalizes Hanbury-Brown-Twiss interferometry to objects at different temperatures using a generating functional formalism, enabling new astrophysical measurements.
Findings
Identified interference oscillations and asymptotic values in quantum coherence functions.
Applied the theory to binary stars Luhman 16 and Spica, showing feasibility for current telescopes.
Demonstrated potential for measuring stellar radii, distances, and temperatures.
Abstract
Intensity-interferometry based on Hanbury-Brown and Twiss's seminal experiment for determining the radius of the star Sirius formed the basis for developing the quantum theory of light. To date, the principle of this experiment is used in various forms across different fields of quantum optics, imaging and astronomy. Though, the technique is powerful, it has not been generalized for objects at different temperatures. Here, we address this problem using a generating functional formalism by employing the P-function representation of quantum-thermal light. Specifically, we investigate the photon coincidences of a system of two extended objects at different temperature using this theoretical framework. We show two unique aspects in the second-order quantum coherence function - interference oscillations and a long-baseline asymptotic value that depends on the observation frequency,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics · Quantum Information and Cryptography · Spectroscopy and Quantum Chemical Studies
