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1.
J Phys Chem A ; 128(11): 2210-2219, 2024 Mar 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38446597

ABSTRACT

Recently different experimental schemes have been proposed to study the elusive phenomenon of entangled two-photon absorption (ETPA) in nonlinear materials. The attempts to detect ETPA using transmission-based schemes have led to results whose validity is currently under debate because the ETPA signal can be corrupted or emulated by artifacts associated with linear optical losses. The present work addresses the issue of linear losses and the corresponding artifacts in transmission-based ETPA experiments through a new approach that exploits the properties of a Hong-Ou-Mandel (HOM) interferogram. Here, we analyze solutions of rhodamine B (RhB), commonly used as a model of a nonlinear medium in ETPA studies. Then, by using the HOM interferometer as a sensing device, we first demonstrate the equivalence of the standard transmission vs pump power ETPA experiments, presented in many reports, with our novel approach of transmission vs two-photon temporal delay. Second, a detailed study of the effects of optical losses, unrelated to ETPA, over the HOM interferogram is carried out by: (1) characterizing RhB in solutions prepared with different solvents and (2) considering scattering losses introduced by silica nanoparticles used as a controlled linear loss mechanism. Our results clearly expose the deleterious effects of linear optical losses over the ETPA signal when standard transmission experiments are employed and show how, by using the HOM interferogram as a sensing device, it is possible to detect the presence of such losses. Finally, once we showed that the HOM interferogram discriminates properly linear losses, our study also reveals that under the specific experimental conditions considered here, which are the same as those employed in many reported works, the ETPA was not unequivocally detected.

2.
J Phys Chem A ; 127(11): 2608-2617, 2023 Mar 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36913489

ABSTRACT

Recently, different experimental methods intended to detect the entangled two-photon absorption (ETPA) phenomenon in a variety of materials have been reported. The present work explores a different approach in which the ETPA process is studied based on the changes induced in the visibility of a Hong-Ou-Mandel (HOM) interferogram. By using an organic solution of Rhodamine B as a model of nonlinear material interacting with entangled photons at ∼800 nm region produced by spontaneous parametric down-conversion (SPDC) Type-II, the conditions that make possible to detect changes in the visibility of a HOM interferogram upon ETPA are investigated. We support the discussion of our results by presenting a model in which the sample is considered as a spectral filtering function which fulfills the energy conservation conditions required by ETPA, allowing us to explain the experimental observations with good agreement. We believe that this work represents a new perspective to studying the ETPA interaction, by using an ultrasensitive quantum interference technique and a detailed mathematical model of the process.

3.
Opt Express ; 27(18): 25228-25240, 2019 Sep 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31510398

ABSTRACT

We present spatially-resolved observations of orbital angular momentum (OAM) conservation, via a Laguerre-Gauss (LG) basis decomposition, of spatially-entangled photon pairs produced in type-I collinear spontaneous parametric downconversion (SPDC). These results were obtained with a novel detection system for OAM-entangled photon pairs that combines a projective measurement for the signal photon to a specific value of the azimuthal index ls, with a spatially-resolved measurement for the idler photon using an intensified charge coupled (ICCD) camera. In combination with far-field diffraction of the idler photon through a triangular aperture, we are able to obtain: i) the spatial structure of the heralded idler photon, as governed by the user-selected topological charge of the signal photon; ii) the OAM spectrum; and iii) the topological charge (both magnitude and sign) for the heralded idler photon.

4.
Appl Opt ; 55(26): 7252-64, 2016 Sep 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27661361

ABSTRACT

We present a method designed to efficiently extract optical signals from InGaAs avalanche photodiodes (APDs) operated in gated mode. In particular, our method permits an estimation of the fraction of counts that actually results from the signal being measured, as opposed to being produced by noise mechanisms, specifically by afterpulsing. Our method in principle allows the use of InGaAs APDs at high detection efficiencies, with the full operation bandwidth, either with or without resorting to the application of a dead-time. As we show below, our method can be used in configurations where afterpulsing exceeds the genuine signal by orders of magnitude, even near saturation. The algorithms that we have developed are suitable to be used either in real-time processing of raw detection probabilities or in post-processing applications, after a calibration step has been performed. The algorithms that we propose here can complement technologies designed for the reduction of afterpulsing.

5.
Opt Express ; 22(17): 20027-37, 2014 Aug 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25321213

ABSTRACT

We show that an optical vortex beam, implemented classically, can be transferred to the transverse amplitude of a heralded single photon. For this purpose we have relied on the process of spontaneous parametric downconversion (SPDC) for the generation of signal and idler photon pairs, using a pump in the form of a Bessel-Gauss (BG) beam with orbital angular momentum (specifically, with topological charge l = 1 and l = 2). We have designed our source so that it operates within the short SPDC crystal regime for which, the amplitude and phase of the pump may be transferred to a heralded single photon. In order to verify the vortex nature of our heralded single photon, we have shown that the conditional angular spectrum and the transverse intensity at the single-photon level match similar measurements carried out for the pump. In addition, we have shown that when our heralded single photon is diffracted through a triangular aperture, the far-field single-photon transverse intensity exhibits the expected triangular arrangement of intensity lobes associated with the presence of orbital angular momentum.

6.
Opt Lett ; 39(12): 3583-6, 2014 Jun 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24978542

ABSTRACT

We present an experimental and theoretical study of photon pairs generated by spontaneous four-wave mixing (SFWM), based on birefringent phasematching, in a fiber that supports more than one transverse mode. We present SFWM spectra, obtained through single-channel and coincidence photon counting, which exhibit multiple peaks shown here to be the result of multiple SFWM processes associated with different combinations of transverse modes for the pump, signal, and idler waves.

7.
Opt Express ; 20(28): 29761-8, 2012 Dec 31.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23388803

ABSTRACT

We demonstrate the generation of non-diffracting heralded single photons, i.e. which are characterized by a single-photon transverse intensity distribution which remains essentially unchanged over a significant propagation distance. For this purpose we have relied on the process of spontaneous parametric downconversion (SPDC) for the generation of signal and idler photon pairs, where our SPDC crystal is pumped by a Bessel-Gauss (BG) beam. Our experiment shows that the well-understood non-diffracting behavior of a BG beam may be directly mapped to the signal-mode, single photons heralded by the detection of a single idler photon. In our experiment, the heralded single photon is thus arranged to be non-diffracting without the need for projecting its single-photon transverse amplitude, post-generation, in any manner.

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