Efficient high-dimensional entanglement imaging with a compressive-sensing double-pixel camera

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Abstract

We implement a double-pixel compressive-sensing camera to efficiently characterize, at high resolution, the spatially entangled fields that are produced by spontaneous parametric down-conversion. This technique leverages sparsity in spatial correlations between entangled photons to improve acquisition times over raster scanning by a scaling factor up to n2= log(n) for n-dimensional images.We image at resolutions up to 1024 dimensions per detector and demonstrate a channel capacity of 8.4 bits per photon. By comparing the entangled photons' classical mutual information in conjugate bases, we violate an entropic Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen separability criterion for all measured resolutions. More broadly, our result indicates that compressive sensing can be especially effective for higher-order measurements on correlated systems.

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Howland, G. A., & Howell, J. C. (2013). Efficient high-dimensional entanglement imaging with a compressive-sensing double-pixel camera. Physical Review X, 3(1). https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.3.011013

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