Bell inequality experiment for a high brightness time-energy entangled source
Author(s) -
Ian R. Nemitz,
Jonathan Dietz,
Evan J. Katz,
Brian E. Vynhalek,
Benjamin Child,
Bertram M. Floyd,
John Lekki
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
nasa sti repository (national aeronautics and space administration)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.1117/12.2509849
Subject(s) - physics , spontaneous parametric down conversion , photon , photon entanglement , interferometry , optics , coincidence counting , quantum entanglement , bell's theorem , interference (communication) , mach–zehnder interferometer , quantum mechanics , quantum , telecommunications , channel (broadcasting) , computer science
A periodically poled MgO – doped LiNbO3 (MgO:LN) non-degenerate photon pair source is utilized for spontaneous parametric down-conversion of 532 nm photons into time-energy entangled pairs of 794 and 1614 nm photons. The entangled photons are separated using previously detailed sorting optics, such that each wavelength is independently directed through one of two modified Mach-Zehnder interferometers – also known as a Franson interferometer – after which they are fiber-optically guided to high-efficiency photon detectors. Output from the detectors is sent to a high resolution time tagger, where coincidences between the entangled photons are recorded. By varying the length of the long path in one Mach-Zehnder interferometer, it is possible to observe high visibility sinusoidal fringes in the measured coincidence rates (while no variation is seen in single photon detection rates). These fringes – due to interference between the photon probability amplitudes – are indicative of a violation of the Bell inequality, and confirm inconsistencies with local hidden variable theory for the correlations of the time-energy entangled photon pairs.
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