Entangled images from four-wave mixing

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Abstract

Two beams of light can be quantum mechanically entangled through correlations of their phase and intensity fluctuations. For a pair of spatially extended image-carrying light fields, the concept of entanglement can be applied not only to the entire images but also to their smaller details. We used a spatially multimode amplifier based on four-wave mixing in a hot vapor to produce twin images that exhibit localized entanglement. The images can be bright fields that display position-dependent quantum noise reduction in their intensity difference or vacuum twin beams that are strongly entangled when projected onto a large range of different spatial modes. The high degree of spatial entanglement demonstrates that the system is an ideal source for parallel continuous-variable quantum information protocols.

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Boyer, V., Marino, A. M., Pooser, R. C., & Lett, P. D. (2008). Entangled images from four-wave mixing. Science, 321(5888), 544–547. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1158275

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