On Nonlinear Amplification: Improved Quantum Limits for Photon Counting (1809.02195v4)
Abstract: We show that detection of single photons is not subject to the fundamental limitations that accompany quantum linear amplification of bosonic mode amplitudes, even though a photodetector does amplify a few-photon input signal to a macroscopic output signal. Alternative limits are derived for \emph{nonlinear} photon-number amplification schemes with optimistic implications for single-photon detection. Four commutator-preserving transformations are presented: one idealized (which is optimal) and three more realistic (less than optimal). Our description makes clear that nonlinear amplification takes place, in general, at a different frequency $\omega'$ than the frequency $\omega$ of the input photons. This can be exploited to suppress thermal noise even further up to a fundamental limit imposed by amplification into a single bosonic mode. A practical example that fits our description very well is electron-shelving.
Sponsored by Paperpile, the PDF & BibTeX manager trusted by top AI labs.
Get 30 days freePaper Prompts
Sign up for free to create and run prompts on this paper using GPT-5.
Top Community Prompts
Collections
Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.