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Journal ArticleDOI

Optical Coherence and Quantum Optics

01 Nov 1996-American Journal of Physics (American Association of Physics Teachers)-Vol. 64, Iss: 11, pp 1438-1439
About: This article is published in American Journal of Physics.The article was published on 1996-11-01. It has received 234 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Coherence (physics) & Quantum optics.
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PatentDOI
TL;DR: Using the phase change between sequential scans to construct flow-velocity imaging, this technique decouples spatial resolution and velocity sensitivity in flow images and increases imaging speed by more than 2 orders of magnitude without compromising spatial resolution or velocity sensitivity.
Abstract: The invention is a fast-scanning ODT system that uses phase information derived from a Hilbert transformation to increase the sensitivity of flow velocity measurements while maintaining high spatial resolution. The significant increases in scanning speed and velocity sensitivity realized by the invention make it possible to image in vivo blood flow in human skin. The method of the invention overcomes the inherent limitations of the prior art ODT by using a phase change between sequential line scans for velocity image reconstruction. The ODT signal phase or phase shifts at each pixel can be determined from the complex function, {tilde over (Γ)}ODT(t), which is determined through analytic continuation of the measured interference fringes function, ΓODT(t), by use of a Hilbert transformation, by electronic phase demodulation, by optical means, or a fast Fourier transformation. The phase change in each pixel between axial-line scans is then used to calculate the Doppler frequency shift. Sequential measurements of a single line scan, measurements of sequential line scans or measurements of line scans in sequential frames may be used. Because the time between line scans is much longer than the pixel time window, very small Doppler shifts can be detected with this technique. In addition, spatial resolution and velocity sensitivity are decoupled. Furthermore, because two axial-line scans are compared at the same location, speckle modulations in the fringe signal cancel each other and, therefore, will not affect the phase-difference calculation.

875 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The photon counting histogram (PCH) analysis constitutes a novel tool for extracting quantities from fluorescence fluctuation data, i.e., the measured photon counts per molecule and the average number of molecules within the observation volume.

708 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a continuous output coupler for magnetically trapped atoms is demonstrated, where a collimated and monoenergetic beam of atoms is continuously extracted from a Bose-Einstein condensate.
Abstract: We demonstrate a continuous output coupler for magnetically trapped atoms. Over a period of up to 100 ms, a collimated and monoenergetic beam of atoms is continuously extracted from a Bose-Einstein condensate. The intensity and kinetic energy of the output beam of this atom laser are controlled by a weak rf field that induces spin flips between trapped and untrapped states. Furthermore, the output coupler is used to perform a spectroscopic measurement of the condensate, which reveals the spatial distribution of the magnetically trapped condensate and allows manipulation of the condensate on a micrometer scale.

468 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors proposed a space-time description of quantum fluctuations of light in both time and space, which brings about a natural generalization into the spatial domain of such notions as the standard quantum limit, squeezing, antibunching, etc.
Abstract: Nonclassical effects such as squeezing, antibunching, and sub-Poissonian statistics of photons have been attracting attention in quantum optics over the last decade. Up to now most theoretical and experimental investigations have been carried out exclusively in the time domain while neglecting the spatial aspects by considering only one spatial mode of the electromagnetic field. In many situations such an approximation is well justified. There are, however, problems that do not allow in principle a single-mode consideration. This is the case when one wants to investigate the quantum fluctuations of light at different spatial points in the plane perpendicular to the direction of propagation of the light beam. Such an investigation requires a complete description of quantum fluctuations of light in both time and space and cannot be done within a single-mode theory. This space-time description brings about a natural generalization into the spatial domain of such notions as the standard quantum limit, squeezing, antibunching, etc. It predicts, for example, the possibility of generating a light beam with sub-Poissonian statistics of photons not only in time but also in the beam's transverse plane. Of particular relevance to the applications is a situation in which the cross section of the light beam contains several nonoverlapping areas with sub-Poissonian statistics of photons in each. Photodetection of such a beam produces several sub-shot-noise photocurrents depending on the number of independent areas with sub-Poissonian statistics. This is in marked contrast to the case of a single-mode sub-Poissonian light beam in which any attempt to collect light from only a part of the beam deteriorates the degree of shot-noise reduction. This property of multimode squeezed light opens a range of interesting new applications in optical imaging, optical parallel processing of information, parallel computing, and many other areas in which it is desirable to have a light beam with regular photon statistics across its transverse area. The aim of this review is to describe the recent development in this branch of quantum optics.

303 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This work predicts dramatically reduced switching thresholds for nonlinear optical devices incorporating fiber ring resonators, allowing for photonic switching devices that operate at milliwatt power levels in ordinary optical fibers.
Abstract: We predict dramatically reduced switching thresholds for nonlinear optical devices incorporating fiber ring resonators. The circulating power in such a resonator is much larger than the incident power; also, the phase of the transmitted light varies rapidly with the single-pass phase shift. The combined action of these effects leads to a finesse-squared reduction in the switching threshold, allowing for photonic switching devices that operate at milliwatt power levels in ordinary optical fibers.

270 citations