This course gives you access to basic tools and concepts to understand research articles and books on modern quantum optics. You will learn about quantization of light, formalism to describe quantum states of light without any classical analogue, and observables allowing one to demonstrate typical quantum properties of these states. These tools will be applied to the emblematic case of a one-photon wave packet, which behaves both as a particle and a wave. Wave-particle duality is a great quantum mystery in the words of Richard Feynman. You will be able to fully appreciate real experiments demonstrating wave-particle duality for a single photon, and applications to quantum technologies based on single photon sources, which are now commercially available. The tools presented in this course will be widely used in our second quantum optics course, which will present more advanced topics such as entanglement, interaction of quantized light with matter, squeezed light, etc...
So if you have a good knowledge in basic quantum mechanics and classical electromagnetism, but always wanted to know:
• how to go from classical electromagnetism to quantized radiation,
• how the concept of photon emerges,
• how a unified formalism is able to describe apparently contradictory behaviors observed in quantum optics labs,
• how creative physicists and engineers have invented totally new technologies based on quantum properties of light,
then this course is for you.
In this first lesson, you will discover what is canonical quantization, apply it to the quantization of a single mode of the electromagnetic field, and find that it behaves as a quantum harmonic oscillator. The notion of photon will then naturally emerge, as well as the weird but fundamental notion of vacuum fluctuations.
What's included
13 videos3 readings10 assignments
Show info about module content
13 videos•Total 119 minutes
0.0 General introduction to the course•12 minutes
1.0 Introduction to Lesson 1•5 minutes
1.1 Canonical quantization•10 minutes
1.2.1 Material harmonic oscillator /1•11 minutes
1.2.2 Material harmonic oscillator /2•12 minutes
1.3 Single mode of radiation•10 minutes
1.4 Canonical quantization of a single mode•10 minutes
1.5 Observables•7 minutes
1.6 Number states; Photon•7 minutes
1.7 Vacuum fluctuations•5 minutes
1.8 What have we learnt? What next?•5 minutes
Introduction to homework 1•11 minutes
Quantization of classical oscillators•13 minutes
3 readings•Total 90 minutes
Homework 1•60 minutes
Correction of Homework 1•30 minutes
Einstein's 1905 paper introducing the "photon"•0 minutes
10 assignments•Total 300 minutes
Homework 1 evaluation•30 minutes
Questions about the general introduction•30 minutes
Practice quiz video 1.1•30 minutes
Practice quiz video 1.2.1•30 minutes
Video 1.2.2.•30 minutes
Video 1.3•30 minutes
Video 1.4•30 minutes
Video 1.5•30 minutes
Video 1.7•30 minutes
Video 1.8•30 minutes
One photon state in a single mode: particle-like behaviour
Module 2•5 hours to complete
Module details
In this lesson, you will discover how the quantum optics formalism leads to the particle-like behaviour of a one photon wave-packet. For this, you will have to learn the quantum optics expressions of the simple and joint photodetection signals. A comparison with the semi-classical expressions will illustrate the necessity of quantum optics.
What's included
7 videos2 readings5 assignments
Show info about module content
7 videos•Total 52 minutes
2.0 Introduction•4 minutes
2.1 The semi-classical model of optics•9 minutes
2.2 One-photon state in a single mode•11 minutes
2.3 Photo-detection signals•7 minutes
2.4 Single photo-detection signal for a one photon state•4 minutes
2.5 Double photo-detection signal for a one photon state: a fully quantum behavior•7 minutes
2.6 Quantum optics: a must•10 minutes
2 readings•Total 90 minutes
Homework 2•60 minutes
Correction of Homework 2•30 minutes
5 assignments•Total 150 minutes
Homework 2 evaluation•30 minutes
Video 2.1•30 minutes
Video 2.2•30 minutes
Video 2.3•30 minutes
Video 2.6•30 minutes
One photon interference: Wave-Particle duality
Module 3•5 hours to complete
Module details
In this lesson, you will address the fascinating question of a single photon interfering with itself, by calculating the interference pattern for a single photon launched into a Mach-Zehnder interferometer. In order to do it you will first learn how to treat a beam-splitter in quantum optics, a very important tool that you need to know. You will also learn that when you want to describe an optical instrument in quantum optics, it is very useful to master its classical optics description. This lesson is an opportunity to think about the mysterious concept of wave-particle duality, and about the power of the quantum formalism, which can deal consistently with two behaviours apparently contradictory .
What's included
6 videos3 readings4 assignments
Show info about module content
6 videos•Total 56 minutes
3.0 Introduction to Lesson 3•7 minutes
3.1 Beam-splitter in quantum optics•17 minutes
3.2 One photon wave-packet on a beam splitter•10 minutes
3.3 Mach-Zehnder interferometer in classical optics•10 minutes
3.4 One-photon interference•5 minutes
3.5 Wave-particle duality: “a quantum mystery”; a consistent formalism•7 minutes
3 readings•Total 100 minutes
Homework 3•60 minutes
Homework 3 correction•30 minutes
A historical feeble light interference experiment•10 minutes
4 assignments•Total 120 minutes
Homework 3 evaluation•30 minutes
Video 3.1 Tensor product properties•30 minutes
Video 3.2 Transforming photon number operator on a BS•30 minutes
Final practice quiz•30 minutes
Multimode quantized radiation: quantum optics in a real lab
Module 4•4 hours to complete
Module details
In the real world there is nothing like purely monochromatic radiation. A correct description of radiation necessarily involves several modes. In this lesson, you will learn how canonical quantization can be easily generalized to the case of several modes, and how various observables or important quantities introduced in the single mode case are expressed in the multimode case. Beyond the formalism that you must learn to be able to read papers and books describing real situtations, you will encounter in this lesson some intriguing features of the quantum formalism: firstly, the unbelievably large size of the space of states, which is the reason for the unlimited potential power of quantum information; secondly, the question of infinities, a problem which was solved by the general procedure of renormalization. Note that optional readings are proposed as resources of some lectures.
What's included
8 videos3 readings2 assignments
Show info about module content
8 videos•Total 60 minutes
4.0 Introduction to lesson 4•4 minutes
4.1 Canonical quantization of multimode radiation•14 minutes
4.2 Eigen-states of the Hamiltonian: space of states, energy of the vacuum•8 minutes
4.3 Total number of photons•3 minutes
4.4 Linear and angular momentum•6 minutes
4.5 Field observables: vacuum fluctuations•5 minutes
4.6 Photo-detection signals•12 minutes
4.7 Conclusion: what you have learned; the quantum vacuum•7 minutes
3 readings•Total 130 minutes
Paper of Glauber 1983 on quantum formalism of light•10 minutes
Homework 4•90 minutes
homework 4 corrected•30 minutes
2 assignments•Total 60 minutes
Homework 4 evaluation•30 minutes
Video 4.4•30 minutes
One photon sources in the real world
Module 5•4 hours to complete
Module details
One photon sources are important components in quantum optics, both in research laboratories and in applied quantum technologies. The lesson of this week will present the various kinds of one-photon sources available today, from heralded one photon sources to one photon sources on demand. You will learn how to use the multimode formalism presented in a previous lesson, to describe one-photon wave packets, in particular in the case of a spontaneously emitted photon. You will start with the presentation of a theoretical tool much used in quantum optics, the Heisenberg formalism. It will allow you to discover the formula expressing the probability of a double detection at two different times. You will also learn some `tricks of the trade' about Fourier transforms.
Wave-particle duality for a single photon in the real world
Module 6•4 hours to complete
Module details
You are now ready to develop the description of a real experiment , which was the first one to reveal directly the dual nature -- wave and particle, of a real single photon wave-packet. You will not only be able to describe, with the formalism you have learned, both the particle-like and the wave-like behaviors, but you will also see how to take into account the features of a real experiment, which is never perfect. Last and not least, we will have the opportunity to think about the notions of wave-particle duality and complementarity, which should be not confused, and about thethe statement of Feynman, who named wave-particle duality “a great quantum mystery”. I will try to convince you that when one identifies a mysterious behavior, one should not complain, but rather explore the possibility that something new and interesting can emerge from that mystery.
What's included
8 videos2 readings2 assignments
Show info about module content
8 videos•Total 81 minutes
6.0 Introduction to Lesson 6•3 minutes
6.1 Anti-correlation for a one-photon wave-packet on a beam-splitter•13 minutes
6.3 Anti-correlation with supplementary photons•10 minutes
6.4 One-photon interference signal•14 minutes
6.5 One photon interference experiment•14 minutes
6.6 Wave particle duality and complementarity•9 minutes
6.7 A fruitful mystery•7 minutes
2 readings•Total 120 minutes
Homework 6•90 minutes
Correction of homework 6•30 minutes
2 assignments•Total 60 minutes
Evaluation of homework 6•30 minutes
video 6.4•30 minutes
One-photon based quantum technologies
Module 7•3 hours to complete
Module details
In this lesson, you will discover two quantum technologies based on one photon sources. Quantum technologies allow one to achieve a goal in a way qualitatively different from a classical technology aiming at the same goal. For instance, quantum cryptography is immune to progress in computers power, while many classical cryptography methods can in principle be broken when we have more powerful computers. Similarly, quantum random number generators yield true random numbers, while classical random number generators only produce pseudo-random numbers, which might be guessed by somebody else than the user. This lesson is also an opportunity to learn two important concepts in quantum information: (i) qubits based on photon polarization; (ii) the celebrated no-cloning theorem, at the root of the security of quantum cryptography.
What's included
7 videos1 reading2 assignments
Show info about module content
7 videos•Total 79 minutes
7.0 The second quantum revolution: from concepts to technology•8 minutes
7.1 Quantum random numbers generator (QRNG)•10 minutes
7.2 Weak light pulses on a beam-splitter•9 minutes
7.3 One-photon polarization as a qubit•15 minutes
7.4 Quantum cryptography: the BB84 QKD scheme•15 minutes
7.5 The no-cloning theorem•14 minutes
7.6 Conclusion of the lesson and of Quantum Optics 1•8 minutes
1 reading•Total 60 minutes
Homework 7•60 minutes
2 assignments•Total 45 minutes
Video 7.1•30 minutes
Evaluation of homework 7 (non graded)•15 minutes
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École polytechnique combines research, teaching and innovation at the highest scientific and technological level worldwide to meet the challenges of the 21st century. At the forefront of French engineering schools for more than 200 years, its education promotes a culture of multidisciplinary scientific excellence, open in a strong humanist tradition.\n
L’École polytechnique associe recherche, enseignement et innovation au meilleur niveau scientifique et technologique mondial pour répondre aux défis du XXIe siècle. En tête des écoles d’ingénieur françaises depuis plus de 200 ans, sa formation promeut une culture d’excellence scientifique pluridisciplinaire, ouverte dans une forte tradition humaniste.
Is it necessary to follow this course to enrol in the future second course on quantum optics?
There is no obligation, but the notions learned in this course will be necessary to follow the second course, which will present interaction between matter and quantized radiation, absorption, stimulated emission and spontaneous emission of photons, squeezed light, entangled photons, quantum treatment of non-linear optics, and applications to quantum technologies, etc...
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