ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
So far experimental confirmation of entanglement has been restricted to qubits, i.e. two-state quantum systems including recent realization of three- and four-qubit entanglements. Yet, an ever increasing body of theoretical work calls for entanglement in quantum system of higher dimensions. Here we report the first realization of multi-dimensional entanglement exploiting the orbital angular momentum of photons, which are states of the electromagnetic field with phase singularities (doughnut modes). The properties of such states could be of importance for the efforts in the field of quantum computation and quantum communication. For example, quantum cryptography with higher alphabets could enable one to increase the information flux through the communication channels.
The self-imaging, or Talbot Effect, that occurs with the propagation of periodically structured waves has enabled several unique applications in optical metrology, image processing, data transmission, and matter-wave interferometry. In this work, we
We demonstrate the coherent transfer of the orbital angular momentum of a photon to an atom in quantized units of hbar, using a 2-photon stimulated Raman process with Laguerre-Gaussian beams to generate an atomic vortex state in a Bose-Einstein conde
Recently, atomic ensemble and single photons were successfully entangled by using collective enhancement [D. N. Matsukevich, textit{et al.}, Phys. Rev. Lett. textbf{95}, 040405(2005).], where atomic internal states and photonic polarization states we
The optical spin-orbit coupling occurring in a suitably patterned nonuniform birefringent plate known as `q-plate allows entangling the polarization of a single photon with its orbital angular momentum (OAM). This process, in turn, can be exploited f
Hybrid entangled states exhibit entanglement between different degrees of freedom of a particle pair and thus could be useful for asymmetric optical quantum network where the communication channels are characterized by different properties. We report