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Journal ArticleDOI

Optical communication with two-photon coherent states--Part II: Photoemissive detection and structured receiver performance

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TLDR
In this paper, photoemissive detection of arbitrary quantized radiation fields is studied with incorporation of the nontrivial effects of detector quantum efficiency and the increase in homodyne signal-to-noise ratio obtained by use of TCS radiation yields significant performance gains in both linear modulation and antipodal signal detection.
Abstract
In Part I of this three-part study, it was shown that novel quantum states, called two-photon coherent states (TCS), have significant potential for improving free-space optical communications. Because TCS radiation does not possess a classical analog, i.e., its diagonal P -representation is highly singular, the semiclassical conditional Poisson process model for direct detection is not applicable to TCS reception. In this paper, photoemissive detection of arbitrary quantized radiation fields is studied with incorporation of the nontrivial effects of detector quantum efficiency. General theorems are derived permitting the application of classical point process results to the detection and estimation of signals in arbitrary quantum states. These general theorems are applied to determining the performance of TCS optical communication systems that employ direct, heterodyne, or homodyne detection in binary decision as well as in linear modulation problems. It is shown that the use of TCS radiation with direct detection or heterodyne detection results in minimal performance increments over comparable coherent-state systems. Homodyne detection, however, can achieve the full TCS signal-to-noise ratio improvement predicted in Part I of this study. The increase in homodyne signal-to-noise ratio obtained by use of TCS radiation yields significant performance gains in both linear modulation and antipodal signal detection.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Squeezed states of light

TL;DR: The properties of a unique set of quantum states of the electromagnetic field are reviewed in this article, and proposed schemes for the generation and detection of squeezed states as well as potential applications are discussed.
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Coherent states: Theory and some Applications

TL;DR: In this article, a general algorithm for constructing coherent states of dynamical groups for a given quantum physical system is presented, and the result is that the coherent states are isomorphic to a coset space of group geometrical space.
Journal ArticleDOI

Noise in homodyne and heterodyne detection.

TL;DR: Both the quantum and the excess noise of the local oscillator can be eliminated by coherent subtraction of the two outputs of a 50-50 beam splitter, demonstrating the fact that the basic quantum noise in homodyning and heterodyning is signal quantum fluctuation, not local-oscillator shot noise.
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Nanoscale heat engine beyond the Carnot limit.

TL;DR: It is shown that the efficiency at maximum power increases with the degree of squeezing, surpassing the standard Carnot limit and approaching unity exponentially for large squeezing parameters.
Journal ArticleDOI

Optical communication with two-photon coherent states--Part III: Quantum measurements realizable with photoemissive detectors

TL;DR: It was shown that homodyne detection achieves the same signal-to-noise ratio as the quantum field quadrature measurement, thus providing a receiver which realizes the linear modulation TCS performance gain found in Part I.
References
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Quantum detection and estimation theory

TL;DR: In this article, the optimum procedure for choosing between two hypotheses, and an approximate procedure valid at small signal-to-noise ratios and called threshold detection, are presented, and a quantum counterpart of the Cramer-Rao inequality of conventional statistics sets a lower bound to the mean-square errors of such estimates.
Journal ArticleDOI

Two-photon coherent states of the radiation field

TL;DR: In this paper, the concept of two-photon coherent states is introduced for applications in quantum optics, which is a simple generalization of the well-known minimum-uncertainty wave packets.
Journal ArticleDOI

Optical communication with two-photon coherent states--Part III: Quantum measurements realizable with photoemissive detectors

TL;DR: It was shown that homodyne detection achieves the same signal-to-noise ratio as the quantum field quadrature measurement, thus providing a receiver which realizes the linear modulation TCS performance gain found in Part I.
Journal ArticleDOI

Optical communication with two-photon coherent states--Part I: Quantum-state propagation and quantum-noise

TL;DR: The quantum analog of the classical paraxial diffraction theory for quasimonochromatic scalar waves is developed, which describes the propagation of arbitrary quantum states as a boundary-value problem suitable for communication system analysis.