Towards quantum telescopes: demonstration of a two-photon interferometer for precision astrometry

Classical optical interferometry requires maintaining live, phase-stable links between telescope stations. This requirement greatly adds to the cost of extending to long baseline separations and limits on baselines will in turn limit the achievable angular resolution. Here we describe a novel type o...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inOptics express Vol. 31; no. 26; pp. 44246 - 44258
Main Authors Crawford, Jesse, Dolzhenko, Denis, Keach, Michael, Mueninghoff, Aaron, Abrahao, Raphael A, Martinez-Rincon, Julian, Stankus, Paul, Vintskevich, Stephen, Nomerotski, Andrei
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Optical Society of America 18.12.2023
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Summary:Classical optical interferometry requires maintaining live, phase-stable links between telescope stations. This requirement greatly adds to the cost of extending to long baseline separations and limits on baselines will in turn limit the achievable angular resolution. Here we describe a novel type of two-photon interferometer for astrometry, which uses photons from two separate sky sources and does not require an optical link between stations. Such techniques may make large increases in interferometric baselines practical, even by orders of magnitude, with a corresponding improvement in astrometric precision benefiting numerous fields in astrophysics. We tested a benchtop analogue version of the two-source interferometer and unambiguously observe correlated behavior in detections of photon pairs from two thermal light sources, in agreement with theoretical predictions. This work opens new possibilities in future astronomical measurements.
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USDOE
SULI; FWP PO202
ISSN:1094-4087
1094-4087
DOI:10.1364/OE.486342