论文标题
使用铁氧体参数放大器和同伴干涉仪的毫米波钟测试
A millimeter-wave Bell Test using a ferrite parametric amplifier and a homodyne interferometer
论文作者
论文摘要
提出了组合的铁氧体参数放大器和毫米波同型干涉仪作为环境温度铃铛测试。结果表明,由于其狭窄的线宽度LARMOR预恢复共振,Yttrium铁石榴石(YIG)铁素体的非线性磁化易感性使其成为创建纠缠光子的理想材料。可以使用同源干涉仪来测量这些,因为可以筛选出与环境温度发射相关的热产生的光子数量大得多。所提出的架构可以使基于YIG量子技术的传感器能够开发,并模仿毫米波频带中近红外和可见区域中大量的量子光学实验,通过使用非线性β钡babium babium batium batium batium batium batium batium batium bate bation bate bate baterrogic of yig的类似物。这里说明了YIG参数放大器如何重现量子光学I型和II型波相互作用,这些相互作用可用于在毫米波频段中创建纠缠的光子。据估计,当将半立方厘米的YIG晶体放置在几个特斯拉的磁场中,并用5瓦的5毫米波辐射泵送时,每秒大约0.5x10^12纠缠毫米波光子对每秒产生。这意味着成功的铃铛测试仅需要几十秒的集成时间。成功的证明将导致基于纠缠的量子技术室温传感器的新型体系结构,将YIG重新构成现代量子材料。
A combined ferrite parametric amplifier and millimeter-wave homodyne interferometer are proposed as an ambient temperature Bell Test. It is shown that the non-linear magnetic susceptibility of the yttrium iron garnet (YIG) ferrite, on account of its narrow line-width Larmor precessional resonance, make it an ideal material for the creation of entangled photons. These can be measured using a homodyne interferometer, as the much larger number of thermally generated photons associated with ambient temperature emission can be screened out. The proposed architecture may enable YIG quantum technology-based sensors to be developed, mimicking in the millimeter-wave band the large number of quantum optical experiments in the near-infrared and visible regions which had been made possible by use of the nonlinear beta barium borate ferroelectric, an analogue of YIG. It is illustrated here how the YIG parametric amplifier can reproduce quantum optical Type I and Type II wave interactions, which can be used to create entangled photons in the millimeter-wave band. It is estimated that when half a cubic centimeter of YIG crystal is placed in a magnetic field of a few Tesla and pumped with 5 Watts of millimeter-wave radiation, approximately 0.5x10^12 entangled millimeter-wave photon pairs per second are generated by the spin-wave interaction. This means an integration time of only a few tens of seconds is needed for a successful Bell Test. A successful demonstration of this will lead to novel architectures of entanglement-based quantum technology room temperature sensors, re-envisioning YIG as a modern quantum material.