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Jeffrey H. Shapiro

Researcher at Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Publications -  401
Citations -  20076

Jeffrey H. Shapiro is an academic researcher from Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Photon & Quantum key distribution. The author has an hindex of 65, co-authored 395 publications receiving 17401 citations.

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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Demonstration of loss-tolerant quantum key distribution

TL;DR: In this paper, the first demonstration of floodlight quantum key distribution was presented, which thrives on sending many photons per bit to overcome propagation loss and achieved 52Mb/s secret key rate over a channel with 10 dB loss.

Generation of Large Photon-Number Cat States using Linear Optics and Quantum Memory

TL;DR: A recursive method for producing path-entangled states of light is presented in this article, which may find applications in quantum lithography and high-precision interferometric measurements The required resources are single-photon sources, linear optics components, and photodetectors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Comment on `Simulation of Bell states with incoherent thermal light'

TL;DR: In this paper, Chen et al. showed that the photon-coincidence counting experiments can be fully explained with semiclassical photodetection theory, in which light is taken to be a classical electromagnetic wave, and the discreteness of the electron charge leads to shot noise as the fundamental photodeterection noise.
Posted Content

Quantum Ghost Imaging through Turbulence

TL;DR: In this article, the effect of turbulence on quantum ghost imaging was investigated and it was shown that by decoupling the entangled photon source from the ghost imaging central image plane, the authors were able to dramatically increase the ghost image quality.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Conjugate-Franson interferometry for testing nonlocality of time-energy entangled biphotons

TL;DR: In this paper, the first experimental demonstration of a conjugate-Franson interferometer that can certify time-energy entanglement has been reported, and a measured 96% visibility tightly bounds the temporal correlation of biphotons generated by spontaneous parametric down-conversion.