Quantum Frequency Resolved Optical Gating of Few-Cycle Squeezed Vacuum
Thomas Zacharias, Elina Sendonaris, Robert Gray, James Williams, Ryoto Sekine, Maximilian Shen, Selina Zhou, Alireza Marandi

TL;DR
This paper introduces a quantum adaptation of frequency-resolved optical gating (FROG) that enables complete characterization of ultrashort quantum pulses, revealing new quantum features and surpassing previous bandwidth limitations.
Contribution
The authors develop and experimentally demonstrate a quantum FROG technique capable of measuring complex temporal modes and quadrature covariances of ultrafast squeezed vacuum states.
Findings
Measured multimode squeezing levels approaching 7 dB.
Achieved measurement bandwidths exceeding 100 THz.
Enabled access to quantum features of pulses at sub-optical-cycle scales.
Abstract
Offering terahertz of bandwidths and femtosecond timescales, ultrafast optics is enabling both the study of fundamental quantum optical phenomena and the advancement of quantum-enhanced applications. However, unlocking the full potential of ultrafast quantum optics requires accessing the temporal characteristics of ultrashort quantum pulses across ultrabroad bandwidths. This is particularly important in the near-infrared and visible range of the optical spectrum, which, unlike the terahertz and long-wave infrared, has remained beyond the reach of current techniques. Here, we break this barrier by translating frequency-resolved optical gating (FROG), a widely used technique for ultrafast classical pulse characterization, to the quantum regime. We show how such a quantum FROG can measure complex temporal modes and sub-optical-cycle quadrature covariances in the near-infrared, enabling…
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