Simulating photon counting from dynamic quantum emitters by exploiting zero-photon measurements
Stephen C. Wein

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel simulation method leveraging zero-photon measurement data, dramatically speeding up and improving the accuracy of photon counting simulations for quantum light sources, with broad implications for quantum technology design.
Contribution
It presents an exponential speedup technique for simulating quantum light sources by exploiting zero-photon measurement outcomes, enabling detailed and efficient modeling of large photonic experiments.
Findings
Achieved eight orders of magnitude reduction in simulation time.
Realized ten orders of magnitude higher precision in photon detection probabilities.
Enabled simulations of complex photonic systems with unprecedented detail.
Abstract
Many applications of quantum optics demand delicate quantum properties of light carefully tailored to accomplish a specific task. To this end, numerical simulations of quantum light sources are vital for designing, characterizing, and optimizing quantum photonic technology. Here, I show that exploiting information hidden in zero-photon measurement outcomes provides an exponential speedup for time-integrated photon counting simulations, realizing eight orders of magnitude reduction in the time to compute six-photon detection probabilities while achieving ten orders of magnitude higher precision compared to the state of the art. This enables simulations of large photonic experiments with an unprecedented level of physical detail. It can accelerate the design of sources to generate photonic resource states for quantum sensing and measurement-based quantum computing while capturing…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNeural Networks and Reservoir Computing · Photonic and Optical Devices · Quantum Information and Cryptography
