4.8 Article

Improved Spatial Resolution Achieved by Chromatic Intensity Interferometry

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS
Volume 127, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.127.103601

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Key R&D Program of China [2018YFB0504300]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China
  3. Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS)
  4. Shanghai Municipal Science and Technology Major Project [2019SHZDZX]
  5. Anhui Initiative in Quantum Information Technologies
  6. Harvard Society of Fellows
  7. U.S. Department of Energy [DE-SC0012567]
  8. European Research Council [742104]
  9. Swedish Research Council [335-2014-7424]

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Research utilizing color erasure detectors has demonstrated improved spatial resolution in imaging tasks beyond the diffraction limit. Experimental measurements using two telescopes showed a distance measurement of sources of different colors at 1.43 km, exceeding the diffraction limit of a single telescope by about 40 times.
Interferometers are widely used in imaging technologies to achieve enhanced spatial resolution, but require that the incoming photons be indistinguishable. In previous work, we built and analyzed color erasure detectors, which expand the scope of intensity interferometry to accommodate sources of different colors. Here we demonstrate experimentally how color erasure detectors can achieve improved spatial resolution in an imaging task, well beyond the diffraction limit. Utilizing two 10.9-mm- aperture telescopes and a 0.8 m baseline, we measure the distance between a 1063.6 and a 1064.4 nm source separated by 4.2 mm at a distance of 1.43 km, which surpasses the diffraction limit of a single telescope by about 40 times. Moreover, chromatic intensity interferometry allows us to recover the phase of the Fourier transform of the imaged objects-a quantity that is, in the presence of modest noise, inaccessible to conventional intensity interferometry.

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