4.7 Article

Spontaneous photon-pair generation from a dielectric nanoantenna

Journal

OPTICA
Volume 6, Issue 11, Pages 1416-1422

Publisher

OPTICAL SOC AMER
DOI: 10.1364/OPTICA.6.001416

Keywords

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Categories

Funding

  1. Australian Research Council [DP150103733, DP160100619, DE180100070, DP190101559, DE170100250, DE190100430]
  2. UK Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council [EP/M013812/1]
  3. PANAMA
  4. NOMOS [ANR-18-CE24-0026]
  5. EU
  6. Royal Society
  7. Erasmus Mundus NANOPHI [5659/002-001]
  8. ERC [789340]
  9. Wolfson Foundation
  10. National Natural Science Foundation of China [11774182, 91750204]
  11. Russian Foundation for Basic Research [18-29-20037, 18-32-20065]
  12. [MD-5791.2018]
  13. Australian Research Council [DE170100250] Funding Source: Australian Research Council
  14. European Research Council (ERC) [789340] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)
  15. EPSRC [EP/J015393/1, EP/M013812/1, EP/M028054/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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Optical nanoantennas have shown a great capacity for efficient extraction of photons from the near to the far field, enabling directional emission from nanoscale single-photon sources. However, their potential for the generation and extraction of multi-photon quantum states remains unexplored. Here we experimentally demonstrate the nanoscale generation of two-photon quantum states at telecommunication wavelengths based on spontaneous parametric down-conversion in an optical nanoantenna. The antenna is a crystalline AlGaAs nanocylinder, possessing Mie-type resonances at both the pump and the bi-photon wavelengths, and when excited by a pump beam it generates photon pairs with a rate of 35 Hz. Normalized to the pump energy stored by the nanoantenna, this rate corresponds to 1.4 GHz/Wm, being 1 order of magnitude higher than conventional on-chip or bulk photon-pair sources. Our experiments open the way for multiplexing several antennas for coherent generation of multi-photon quantum states with complex spatial-mode entanglement and applications in free-space quantum communications and sensing. (c) 2019 Optical Society of America under the terms of the OSA Open Access Publishing Agreement

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