Macroscopic Single-Qubit Operation for Coherent Photons

Abstract

Polarisation is described by an SU(2) wavefunction due to macroscopic coherence of photons emitted from a ubiquitous laser source, and thus, a laser pulse is expected to behave as a macroscopic quantum bit (qubit), i.e., a qubit realised by a macroscopic number of photons. Here, we show that an arbitrary single-qubit operation can be carried out for such a macroscopic qubit by employing optical modulators, together with standard optical plates, in a computer-controlled fibre-optic configuration. We named the device as a Poincar\'e rotator, which allows a dynamic control over a polarisation state by executing an arbitrary amount of rotations on the Poincar\'e sphere. The Poincar\'e rotator works as an arbitrary SU(2) operator in a Lie group, by combining a U(1) operation to change the phase and another U(1) operation to change the amplitude of the wavefunction. We have realised various polarisation states, such as 4 × 4=16, 8 × 8=64, and 10 × 10=100 distinguishable states on the sphere. As a locus of the realised polarisation states on the sphere, we have successfully drawn the molecular structure of Buckminsterfullerene (C60) and the coastline of the earth.

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