Affiliation:
1. Stanford University
2. NTT Research Inc. Physics and Informatics Labs
3. Cornell University
4. Research Laboratory of Electronics
Abstract
Photonic integrated circuits with second-order (χ(2)) nonlinearities are rapidly scaling to
remarkably low powers. At this time, state-of-the-art devices achieve
saturated nonlinear interactions with thousands of photons when driven
by continuous-wave lasers, and further reductions in these energy
requirements enabled by the use of ultrafast pulses may soon push
nonlinear optics into the realm of single-photon nonlinearities. This
tutorial reviews these recent developments in ultrafast nonlinear
photonics, discusses design strategies for realizing few-photon
nonlinear interactions, and presents a unified treatment of ultrafast
quantum nonlinear optics using a framework that smoothly interpolates
from classical behaviors to the few-photon scale. These emerging
platforms for quantum optics fundamentally differ from typical
realizations in cavity quantum electrodynamics due to the large number
of coupled optical modes. Classically, multimode behaviors have been
well studied in nonlinear optics, with famous examples including
soliton formation and supercontinuum generation. In contrast,
multimode quantum systems exhibit a far greater variety of behaviors,
and yet closed-form solutions are even sparser than their classical
counterparts. In developing a framework for ultrafast quantum optics,
we identify what behaviors carry over from classical to quantum
devices, what intuition must be abandoned, and what new opportunities
exist at the intersection of ultrafast and quantum nonlinear optics.
Although this article focuses on establishing connections between the
classical and quantum behaviors of devices with χ(2) nonlinearities, the frameworks developed
here are general and are readily extended to the description of
dynamical processes based on third-order χ(3) nonlinearities.
Funder
National Science Foundation
NTT Research Inc.
Army Research Office
Cited by
3 articles.
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