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Physics Colloquium: Quantization of light in the wave-packet basis: Applications in quantum optics and quantum communications

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Professor Michael Raymer (Department of Physics, and Oregon Center for Optical, Molecular & Quantum Science, University of Oregon, Eugene, OR 97403, United States of America)

Abstract: We review the concepts of temporal modes (TMs) in quantum optics, highlighting Roy Glauber's crucial and historic contributions to their development, and their growing importance in quantum information science. TMs are orthogonal sets of wave packets that can be used to represent a multimode light field. They are temporal counterparts to transverse spatial modes of light and play analogous roles - decomposing multimode light into the most natural basis for isolating statistically independent degrees of freedom. We discuss how TMs were developed to describe compactly various processes: superfluorescence, stimulated Raman scattering, spontaneous parametric down conversion, and spontaneous four-wave mixing. TMs can be manipulated, converted, demultiplexed, and detected using nonlinear optical processes such as three-wave mixing and quantum optical memories. As such, they play an increasingly important role in constructing quantum information networks.

Recent review article: Raymer, M. G., & Walmsley, I. A. (2020). Temporal modes in quantum optics: then and now. Physica Scripta, 95(6), 064002.

Open access: https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/1402-4896/ab6153/meta

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