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91̽»¨
Atomic and Laser Physics
Credit: Jack Hobhouse

Professor Ian Walmsley CBE FRS FCGI

Director, 91̽»¨ Quantum Institute

Sub department

  • Atomic and Laser Physics
Ian.Walmsley@physics.ox.ac.uk
Telephone: 01865 772209
  • About
  • Publications

Optimal Measurements for Simultaneous Quantum Estimation of Multiple Phases

Physical Review Letters American Physical Society (APS) 119:13 (2017) 130504

Authors:

Luca Pezzè, Mario A Ciampini, Nicolò Spagnolo, Peter C Humphreys, Animesh Datta, Ian A Walmsley, Marco Barbieri, Fabio Sciarrino, Augusto Smerzi

Identification of nonclassical properties of light with multiplexing layouts

Physical Review A American Physical Society (APS) 96:1 (2017) 013804

Authors:

J Sperling, A Eckstein, WR Clements, M Moore, JJ Renema, WS Kolthammer, SW Nam, A Lita, T Gerrits, IA Walmsley, GS Agarwal, W Vogel

Detector-Independent Verification of Quantum Light

Physical Review Letters American Physical Society (APS) 118:16 (2017) 163602

Authors:

J Sperling, WR Clements, A Eckstein, M Moore, JJ Renema, WS Kolthammer, SW Nam, A Lita, T Gerrits, W Vogel, GS Agarwal, IA Walmsley

Chip-based array of near-identical, pure, heralded single-photon sources

Optica Optical Society of America 4:1 (2017) 90-96

Authors:

Justin B Spring, PL Mennea, Benjamin J Metcalf, Peter C Humphreys, JC Gates, HL Rogers, Christoph Söller, Brian J Smith, W Steven Kolthammer, Peter GR Smith, Ian A Walmsley

Abstract:

Interference between independent single photons is perhaps the most fundamental interaction in quantum optics. It has become increasingly important as a tool for optical quantum information science, as one of the rudimentary quantum operations, together with photon detection, for generating entanglement between non-interacting particles. Despite this, demonstrations of large-scale photonic networks involving more than two independent sources of quantum light have been limited due to the difficulty in constructing large arrays of high-quality, single-photon sources. Here, we solve the key challenge, reporting on a novel array of five near-identical, low-loss, high-purity, heralded single-photon sources using spontaneous four-wave mixing on a silica chip. We verify source quality through a series of heralded Hong–Ou–Mandel (HOM) experiments, and further report the experimental three-photon extension of the HOM interference effect, which maps out for the first time, to our knowledge, the interference landscape between three independent single-photon sources.

Distinguishability and many-particle interference

Physical Review Letters American Physical Society (2017)

Authors:

Adrian Menssen, Alex E Jones, Benjamin J Metcalf, MC Tichy, Stefanie Barz, W Steven Kolthammer, Ian A Walmsley

Abstract:

Quantum interference of two independent particles in pure quantum states is fully described by the particles’ distinguishability: the closer the particles are to being identical, the higher the degree of quantum interference. When more than two particles are involved, the situation becomes more complex and interference capability extends beyond pairwise distinguishability, taking on a surprisingly rich character. Here, we study many-particle interference using three photons. We show that the distinguishability between pairs of photons is not sufficient to fully describe the photons’ behaviour in a scattering process, but that a collective phase, the triad phase, plays a role. We are able to explore the full parameter space of three-photon interference by generating heralded single photons and interfering them in a fibre tritter. Using multiple degrees of freedom—temporal delays and polarisation—we isolate three-photon interference from two-photon interference. Our experiment disproves the view that pairwise two-photon distinguishability uniquely determines the degree of non-classical many-particle interference.

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