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Post-processing with linear optics for improving the quality of single-photon sources

Dominic W Berry et al 2004 New J. Phys. 6 93   doi: 10.1088/1367-2630/6/1/093  Help

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Dominic W Berry1, Stefan Scheel2, Casey R Myers3, Barry C Sanders1,4, Peter L Knight2 and Raymond Laflamme3,5
1 Department of Physics, Australian Centre for Quantum Computer Technology, Macquarie University, Sydney, New South Wales 2109, Australia
2 Quantum Optics and Laser Science, Blackett Laboratory, Imperial College London, Prince Consort Road, London SW7 2BW, UK
3 Institute for Quantum Computing, University of Waterloo, Ontario N2L 3G1, Canada
4 Institute for Quantum Information Science, University of Calgary, Alberta T2N 1N4, Canada
5 Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics, 35 King Street N., Waterloo, Ontario N2J 2W9, Canada
E-mail: berry@ics.mq.edu.au

Part of Focus on Single Photons on Demand

Abstract. Triggered single-photon sources produce the vacuum state with non-negligible probability, but produce a much smaller multiphoton component. It is therefore reasonable to approximate the output of these photon sources as a mixture of the vacuum and single-photon states. We show that it is impossible to increase the probability for a single photon using linear optics and photodetection on fewer than four modes. This impossibility is due to the incoherence of the inputs; if the inputs were pure-state superpositions, it would be possible to obtain a perfect single-photon output. In the more general case, a chain of beam splitters can be used to increase the probability for a single photon, but at the expense of adding an additional multiphoton component. This improvement is robust against detector inefficiencies, but is degraded by distinguishable photons, dark counts or multiphoton components in the input.

Received 3 February 2004
Published 29 July 2004

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