24.06.2024 • NewsPhotonics

Photon pairs interfere with a twist

Stabilizing the interference of two photons in optical chips.

A colla­boration of Alexander Szameit's research group at the University of Rostock with researchers from the Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg has succeeded in stabilizing the inter­ference of two photons in optical chips with the concept of topologi­cally protected wave propagation. For this result, the researchers explored light evolution in optical waveguide circuits in the presence of topology. This abstract mathematical concept was initially developed to classify solid geometries according to their global properties. Szameit explains: “In topo­logical systems, light only follows the global characteristics of the waveguide system. Local pertur­bations to the waveguides such as defects, vacancies and disorder cannot divert its path.”

Matthias Heinrich, Alexander Szameit and Max Ehrhardt from the University of...
Matthias Heinrich, Alexander Szameit and Max Ehrhardt from the University of Rostock are experimenting with photonic circuits. (Source: U. Rostock)

In 1987, the physicists Hong, Ou and Mandel observed the behaviour of photon pairs in a beam splitter in an experiment that until recently had been independent of topology. They discovered that a photon, which interferes with itself due to its behavior as an electro­magnetic wave, is also able to form interference patterns together with other light particles. In addition to entanglement as further fundamental feature of quantum light particles, this groundbreaking discovery has proven to be an instrumental ingredient for new optical quantum techno­logies, including quantum computers. In a joint effort with colleagues from the Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg, the researchers have accomplished to combine topo­logically robust propagation of light with the inter­ference of photon pairs.

“This result is truly a milestone,” says Szameit, who has been searching for such a connection for a long time. Max Ehrhardt, doctoral candidate, continues: “Quantum techno­logies struggle with ever-increasing complexity. Hence, topological protection of optical elements is a much-needed design tool to ensure proper operation regardless of the finite manu­facturing tolerances of the optical elements.” The physicists attribute the observed peculiar behavior to the quantum nature of light: “Pairs of photons that see each other perceive the waveguide structure as twisted. This causes them to link up, as if they were dancing along the twisted dance floor as a couple. Photons that pass through the waveguide separately only experience a conventional flat surface. So, we have a topo­logical difference”, continues Ehrhardt to explain the mechanism.

“We were amazed just how far we could deform our waveguide system without any impact on quantum interference,” summarizes the group’s senior scientist Matthias Heinrich. Szameit already thinks of further per­spectives to be investi­gated by his team: “Our waveguide systems provide a rich pool of possi­bilities for constructing topo­logical systems for light. The symbiosis with quantum light is just the beginning.” (Source: U. Rostock)

Reference: M. Ehrhardt et al.: Topological Hong-Ou-Mandel interference, Science 384, 1340 (2024); DOI: 10.1126/science.ado8192

Link: Experimental Solid-State Optics, University of Rostock, Rostock, Germany

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