The Poisson distribution of photon number in coherent (laser) light
contributes an uncertainty of to optical
measurements. It is therefore reasonable to anticipate that with
photons, the uncertainty with which an unknown phase
can be determined might be bounded below by , based on the heuristic inequality . Such a limit is known as being due to shot noise, arising
from the particle nature of photons, as we shall now see rigorously.
Consider a Mach-Zehnder interferometer constructed from two 50/50
beamsplitters, used to measure :
Let us analyze this interferometer, first by using a traditional
quantum optics approach in the Heisenberg picture, and second by using
single photons in the Schrodinger picture.
Sensitivity limit for Mach-Zehnder interferometer
Previously, we've defined the unitary transform for a quantum
beamsplitter as being a rotation about the axis, so as to
avoid having to keep track of factors of . For variety, let's now
use a different definition; nothing essential will change.
Let the 50/50 beamsplitter transformation be
This acts on to produce operators describing the output of
the beamsplitter; in particular,
Similarly, the phase shifter acting on the mode operators performs
The Mach-Zehnder transform is thus
The way we have defined these transformations here, the output modes
of the interferometer, and , are
We are interested in the difference between the photon numbers
measured at the two outputs, , where the
extra factor of two is introduced for convenience. We find
The measurement result is thus
Define , and . Recognizing that
is the difference in photon number between the two output arms,
and recalling that this is the main observable result from changing
, we identify the signal we wish to see as being .
Ideally,
the output signal should go as . The signal due to goes
as , and we shall see that this is the noise on the signal.
The average output signal , as a function of , looks like this:
Note that if our goal is to maximize measurement sensitivity to
changes in , then the best point to operate the interferometer
at is around , since the slope is largest
there. At this operating point, if the interferometer's inputs have
laser light coming into only one port, then the outputs have equal
intensity; thus, the interferometer is sometimes said to be
"balanced" when .
What is the uncertainty in our measurement of , derived from the
observable ? By propagating uncertainties, this is
where
Let , such that , and .
Limit for coherent state input
For a coherent state input, , we find
if we define as the input state mean photon number.
Also,
This is consitent with our intuition: the signal should go as , and the undesired term goes as , so it is good that is small on
average. However, there are nontrivial fluctuations in , because
and is nonzero for the
coherent state! Specifically, the noise in is
and thus the variance in the measurement result is
From Eq.(\ref{eq:l7-dphi}), it follows that the uncertainty in
is therefore
This is a very reasonable result; as the number of photons used
increases, the accuracy with which can be determined increases
with . The improvement arises because greater laser power
allows better distinction between the signals in and .
Limit for single photons
Another way to arrive at the same result, using single photons, gives
an alternate interpretation and different insight into the physics.
As we have seen previously, acting on the ,
"dual-rail" photon state, a 50/50 beamsplitter performs a
rotation, and a phase shifter performs a
rotation. The Mach-Zehnder interferometer we're using can thus be
expressed as this transform on a single qubit:
where the probability of measuring a single photon at the output is
. Walking through this optical circuit, the states are found to be
such that
Repeating this times (so that we use the same average number of
photons as in the coherent state case), we find that the standard
deviation in is
Given this, the uncertainty in is
This is the same uncertainty as we obtained for the coherent state
input, but the physical origin is different. Now, we see the noise as
being due to statistical fluctuations of a Bernoulli point process,
one event at a time. The noise thus comes from the amount
of time the signal is integrated over (assuming a constant rate of
photons). The noise is simply shot noise.