Orbital Angular Momentum in Quantum Optics edit

The total angular momentum of light can be decomposed into two components of orbital angular momentum (OAM) and spin orbital angular momentum. OAM of photons plays an important role in quantum optics. Photons with OAM can be used for testing high dimensional Bell's inequalities and quantum key distribution (QKD).

Introduction edit

 
Phase and intensity structure of OAM beams.

The total angular momentum of a paraxial field can be split into two components, spin and orbital angular momentum (OAM). [1]

 

Paraxial fields which have OAM exhibit helical phase structure and have a phase singularity at the center. Typically Laguerre-Gaussian modes are used when working with OAM.

Quantizing the field edit

The starting point to quantize the field in terms of OAM is the vector potential in the Coulomb gauge expanded in terms of plane-waves[1].

 

  is the complex amplitude for either right-handed or left-handed circularly polarized light and   is the unit polarization vector. Typically the paraxial approximation yields a field which is a plane wave modified with an envelope. The wave vector of the carrier field,  , makes a small angle with the optical axis. For the rest of the derivation, it is assumed that   has positive magnitude and propagates along the z-axis. Multiplying vector potential by the identity

 

where  , the vector potential can be written as

 

with  .

  is the envelope which modifies the carrier plane wave. Therefore  must obey the paraxial wave equation[2]  . After plugging in   into the paraxial wave equation the resulting formula is

 

where  , the wavevector in the transverse plane. Then the relation between   and   can be found using the identity above. It yields the result  where  . This allows the vector potential to be written in terms of a strictly positive variable and a parameter which quantifies the 'paraxial-ness ' of the beam.

 

Defining the polarization as is done in [1] and taking the paraxial approximation,   keeping quadratic terms of  , the vector potential becomes

 

Now going to the quantum regime,   and  . The vector potential and the complex amplitudes become operators. The operators   and   satisfy the commutation relation  . Now the vector potential takes the form

 

In order to write the vector potential in terms of quantized Laguerre-Gaussian modes the closure relations of the fourier transformed Laguerre-Gaussian modes is used. Noting that  ,

 

The quantized vector potential can be written in terms of the LG modes.

 

where  . The quantized vector potential is now in terms of a continuous, paraxial plane wave expansion with a transverse field given by the LG modes. The operator   is the creation operator of a quantized LG transverse mode with polarization  , radial quantum number  , and orbital quantum number   carried by a plane wave with wavevector  . A single photon state can be written as  where  is the probability amplitude of finding a photon in a specific LG mode.

The quantum number   contains information about the orbital angular momentum of the state. In the paraxial approximation two quantities of interest are the orbital angular momentum and spin angular momentum about the z-axis. This can be found using the operators

 

These operators 'count' how many photons are in a given mode with OAM (polarization)   ( ) and sum those values for all the modes in the field together.

Bell's Inequalities with Qudits edit

Photons that are entangled in OAM are entangled qudits compared to photons that are entangled in polarization which are entangled qubits. This allows Bell's inequalities to be tested in higher dimensions.

Theory edit

Typically with entangled qubits the CHSH inequality is used and has the simple expression

 

However the expression   is equally valid with   is the probability that measurement outcomes   and   differ by   modulo  , the dimension of the qudits.[3] This equation is upper bounded by 3 for local variable theories as the maximum number of constraints that can be satisfied is 3. However quantum, nonlocal correlations can satisfy all constraints the upper bound for the quantity   is 4.   can be generalized for higher dimensional where  . This is given by the expression[3]

 

Experiment edit

 
A two channel Bell test. The two channel polarizers a and b can be rotated to provide different measurement settings.

Violation of Bell's inequalities in higher dimensions has previously been done in the group of Anton Zeilinger using OAM qudits with  .[4] They use photon's resulting from parametric down conversion with type-1 phase matching. The photons from this process are entangled in OAM, if one photon is measured to have   then the other photon will be measured to have  . The quantity of interest is Bell's expression for dimension of 3 given by

 

It is said that the correlation are local if   and non-local otherwise. The maximum value that   may take is 4 in a non-local variable theory. Zeilinger's experiment is a generalization of the two channel Bell test. There are three possible measurement outcomes for each arm of the experiment corresponding to  . The two channel polarizers are generalized using phase holograms to 'rotate' the photon state to an arbitrary superposition of LG modes. The photon then is projected onto the   states using 3 separate holograms and single mode fibers each with its own single photon detector. The maximum value of   achieved was   which violates the inequality set by local correlations by more than 18 standard deviations.

More recent work in the group of Miles Padgett showed Bell's inequality violations for dimension up to  .[5]

Quantum Key Distribution (QKD) edit

Mutually Unbiased Basis edit

OAM has also been used to demonstrate QKD in high dimensions by the group of Robert Boyd. [6] In order to perform QKD a second basis, called the angular (ANG) basis, is used. Modes in the ANG basis are superpositions of OAM modes which are given by

 

Note that the ANG modes and the OAM modes are mutually unbiased bases, namely,   for all  . In addition, the OAM modes used in the experiment are not the LG modes but a flattop beam with a phase singularity.

Procedure edit

In the experiment of Boyd's group, Alice sends a state in either a OAM or ANG mode to Bob. Bob performs a log-polar to cartesian transformation.[7] This transformation takes OAM modes to plane waves with a wave vector proportional to   which can be focused to a point with a lens. In addition ANG modes are localized to a spot conditioned on  . Next Bob sends these modes through a mode sorter with 50% probability that a measurement is made in the OAM basis and 50% probability that a measurement is made in the ANG basis. Alice and Bob then publicly compare preparation and measurement bases and keep the results where they are the same.

Security edit

The mutual information between Alice and Bob is given by

 

where   the event of sending   and   the event of measuring  . When probability of error of detection of the modes is included into the model the mutual information can be written as

 

where   is the probability that the correct mode is detected. For their experiment it is estimated that the mutual information is 2.05 bits per photon. In addition a secret key rate is calculated and found to be 6.8 secure bits per second. Three attacks are considered: intercept-resend, coherent attacks, and photon number splitting. It was shown that this QKD protocol was secure against intercept-resend and coherent attacks but was not secure against photon number splitting.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Calvo, G. F. (2006). "Quantum field theory of photons with orbital angular momentum". Physical Review A. 73 (1). doi:10.1103/physreva.73.013805.
  2. ^ Aiello, A. (2005). "Exact quantization of a paraxial electromagnetic field". Physical Review A. 72 (6). doi:10.1103/physreva.72.060101.
  3. ^ a b Collins, Daniel (2002). "Bell Inequalities for Arbitrarily High-Dimensional Systems". Physical Review Letters. 88 (4). doi:10.1103/physrevlett.88.040404.
  4. ^ Vaziri, Alipasha (2002). "Experimental Two-Photon, Three-Dimensional Entanglement for Quantum Communication". Physical Review Letters. 89 (24). doi:10.1103/physrevlett.89.240401.
  5. ^ Dada, Adetunmise C.; Leach, Jonathan; Buller, Gerald S.; Padgett, Miles J.; Andersson, Erika (2011/09). "Experimental high-dimensional two-photon entanglement and violations of generalized Bell inequalities". Nature Physics. 7 (9): 677–680. doi:10.1038/nphys1996. ISSN 1745-2481. {{cite journal}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  6. ^ Mirhosseini, Mohammad; Magaña-Loaiza, Omar S.; O’Sullivan, Malcolm N.; Rodenburg, Brandon; Malik, Mehul; Lavery, Martin P. J.; Padgett, Miles J.; Gauthier, Daniel J.; Boyd, Robert W. (2015). "High-dimensional quantum cryptography with twisted light". New Journal of Physics. 17 (3): 033033. doi:10.1088/1367-2630/17/3/033033. ISSN 1367-2630.
  7. ^ Lavery, Martin P. J.; Robertson, David J.; Berkhout, Gregorius C. G.; Love, Gordon D.; Padgett, Miles J.; Courtial, Johannes (2012-01-30). "Refractive elements for the measurement of the orbital angular momentum of a single photon". Optics Express. 20 (3): 2110–2115. doi:10.1364/OE.20.002110. ISSN 1094-4087.