Linear-optical processing cannot increase photon efficiency
Abstract
We answer the question whether linear-optical processing of the states produced by one or multiple imperfect single-photon sources can improve the single-photon fidelity. This processing can include arbitrary interferometers, coherent states, feedforward, and conditioning on results of detections. We show that without introducing multiphoton components, the single-photon fraction in any of the single-mode states resulting from such processing cannot be made to exceed the efficiency of the best available photon source. If multiphoton components are allowed, the single-photon fidelity cannot be increased beyond 1/2. We propose a natural general definition of the quantum-optical state efficiency, and show that it cannot increase under linear-optical processing.
Keywords
Cite
@article{arxiv.1004.2245,
title = {Linear-optical processing cannot increase photon efficiency},
author = {D. W. Berry and A. I. Lvovsky},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1004.2245},
year = {2010}
}
Comments
4 pages, 3 figures