Semiconductor quantum dots (QDs) are excellent candidates for continuous-variable (CV) quantum information processing, a paradigm which relies on the encoding of quantum information in the electromagnetic field of light. The high fibered brightness [1], ability to create photon number superpositions when coherently driven [2], and nonlinear nature afforded by a single emitter in a cavity [3], make quantum dots in micropillar cavities excellent candidates for CV quantum information processing. A founding pillar in the CV paradigm is homodyne detection, relying on the optimal mean-wavepacket-overlap M between classical and quantum light [4]. We aim at using the expertise gathered by our team in quantum interferences to perform the reconstruction of the Wigner function of a single photon.
References:
- N. Maring et al. Nature Photonics (2024). Link to article.
- J. C. Loredo et al., Nat. Photonics 13, 803 (2019).
- L. De Santis et al., Nat. Nanotech. 12, 663 (2017).