Mehringer T, Mährlein S, von Zanthier J, Agarwal G (2018)
Publication Status: Published
Publication Type: Journal article
Publication year: 2018
Publisher: OPTICAL SOC AMER
Book Volume: 43
Pages Range: 2304-2307
Journal Issue: 10
DOI: 10.1364/OL.43.002304
Interference of light fields, first postulated by Young, is one of the fundamental pillars of physics. Dirac extended this observation to the quantum world by stating that each photon interferes only with itself. A precondition for interference to occur is that no welcher-weg information labels the paths the photon takes; otherwise, the interference vanishes. This remains true, even if two-photon interference is considered, e.g., in the Hong-Ou-Mandel-experiment. Here, the two photons interfere only if they are indistinguishable, e.g., in frequency, momentum, polarization, and time. Less known is the fact that two-photon interference and photon indistinguishability also determine the photon statistics in the overlapping light fields of two independent sources. As a consequence, measuring the photon statistics in the far field of two independent sources reveals the degree of indistinguishability of the emitted photons. In this Letter, we prove this statement in theory using a quantum mechanical treatment. We also demonstrate the outcome experimentally with a simple setup consisting of two statistically independent thermal light sources with adjustable polarizations. We find that the photon statistics vary indeed as a function of the polarization settings, the latter determining the degree of welcher-weg information of the photons emanating from the two sources. (C) 2018 Optical Society of America.
APA:
Mehringer, T., Mährlein, S., von Zanthier, J., & Agarwal, G. (2018). Photon statistics as an interference phenomenon. Optics Letters, 43(10), 2304-2307. https://doi.org/10.1364/OL.43.002304
MLA:
Mehringer, Thomas, et al. "Photon statistics as an interference phenomenon." Optics Letters 43.10 (2018): 2304-2307.
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