Near-Field Optics with Single Photon Detectors and a Photon Time-Tagger
ORAL
Abstract
Probing condensed matter systems with quantum light can provide direct measurements of coherence and entanglement among collective electronic excitations. Combining near-field microscopy with quantum light enables the measurement of these properties in real-space and at the collective excitation’s native length scales.
In traditional scattering-type scanning near-field optical microscopy (s-SNOM), the tip oscillation modulates the coupling between the incident light and the tip-sample interaction at integer multiples of the tip frequency. A lock-in detector can then eliminate any optical signal that does not oscillate at the desired multiple of the tip frequency, allowing for the extraction of the true near-field signal.
However, the single photon detectors needed for detecting quantum light output a pulse with constant amplitude to denote the photon count rate; demodulating the optical signal in this digital pulse regime with a lock-in amplifier is no longer feasible. In this talk, I will discuss alternative methods for extracting a near-field signal using single photon detectors and a photon time-tagger.
In traditional scattering-type scanning near-field optical microscopy (s-SNOM), the tip oscillation modulates the coupling between the incident light and the tip-sample interaction at integer multiples of the tip frequency. A lock-in detector can then eliminate any optical signal that does not oscillate at the desired multiple of the tip frequency, allowing for the extraction of the true near-field signal.
However, the single photon detectors needed for detecting quantum light output a pulse with constant amplitude to denote the photon count rate; demodulating the optical signal in this digital pulse regime with a lock-in amplifier is no longer feasible. In this talk, I will discuss alternative methods for extracting a near-field signal using single photon detectors and a photon time-tagger.
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Presenters
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Michael Dapolito
Columbia University
Authors
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Michael Dapolito
Columbia University
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Matthew Fu
Columbia University
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Thomas P Darlington
Columbia University
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Abhay Pasupathy
Columbia University, Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL)
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James Schuck
Columbia University
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Dmitri N Basov
Columbia University