A. Franzen
Max Planck Society
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Featured researches published by A. Franzen.
Physical Review Letters | 2008
H. Vahlbruch; M. Mehmet; N. Lastzka; B. Hage; S. Chelkowski; A. Franzen; S. Gossler; Karsten Danzmann; Roman Schnabel
Squeezing of lights quantum noise requires temporal rearranging of photons. This again corresponds to creation of quantum correlations between individual photons. Squeezed light is a nonclassical manifestation of light with great potential in high-precision quantum measurements, for example, in the detection of gravitational waves [C. M. Caves, Phys. Rev. D 23, 1693 (1981)10.1103/PhysRevD.23.1693]. Equally promising applications have been proposed in quantum communication [H. P. Yuen and J. H. Shapiro, IEEE Trans. Inf. Theory 24, 657 (1978)10.1109/TIT.1978.1055958]. However, after 20 years of intensive research doubts arose whether strong squeezing can ever be realized as required for eminent applications. Here we show experimentally that strong squeezing of lights quantum noise is possible. We reached a benchmark squeezing factor of 10 in power (10 dB). Thorough analysis reveals that even higher squeezing factors will be feasible in our setup.
Physical Review Letters | 2006
H. Vahlbruch; S. Chelkowski; B. Hage; A. Franzen; Karsten Danzmann; Roman Schnabel
We propose and demonstrate a coherent control scheme for stable phase locking of squeezed vacuum fields. We focus on sideband fields at frequencies from 10 Hz to 10 kHz, which is a frequency regime of particular interest in gravitational-wave detection and for which conventional control schemes have failed so far. A vacuum field with broadband squeezing covering this entire band was produced using optical parametric oscillation and characterized with balanced homodyne detection. The system was stably controlled over long periods utilizing two coherent but frequency shifted control fields. In order to demonstrate the performance of our setup the squeezed field was used for a nonclassical sensitivity improvement of a Michelson interferometer at audio frequencies.
Classical and Quantum Gravity | 2006
H. Lück; M. Hewitson; P. Ajith; B. Allen; P. Aufmuth; C. Aulbert; S. Babak; R. Balasubramanian; B. Barr; Steven J. Berukoff; Alexander Bunkowski; G. Cagnoli; C. A. Cantley; M. M. Casey; S. Chelkowski; Y. Chen; D. Churches; T. Cokelaer; C. N. Colacino; D. R. M. Crooks; Curt Cutler; Karsten Danzmann; R. J. Dupuis; E. J. Elliffe; Carsten Fallnich; A. Franzen; A. Freise; I. Gholami; S. Goßler; A. Grant
Of all the large interferometric gravitational-wave detectors, the German/British project GEO600 is the only one which uses dual recycling. During the four weeks of the international S4 data-taking run it reached an instrumental duty cycle of 97% with a peak sensitivity of 7 × 10−22 Hz−1/2 at 1 kHz. This paper describes the status during S4 and improvements thereafter.
Physical Review Letters | 2005
H. Vahlbruch; S. Chelkowski; B. Hage; A. Franzen; Karsten Danzmann; Roman Schnabel
We report on the experimental combination of three advanced interferometer techniques for gravitational wave detection, namely, power recycling, detuned signal recycling, and squeezed field injection. For the first time, we experimentally prove the compatibility of especially the latter two. To achieve a broadband nonclassical sensitivity improvement, we applied a filter cavity for compensation of quadrature rotation. The signal-to-noise ratio was improved by up to 2.8 dB beyond the coherent states shot noise. The complete setup was stably locked for arbitrary times and characterized by injected single-sideband modulation fields.
Physical Review D | 2003
J. Harms; Yanbei Chen; S. Chelkowski; A. Franzen; H. Vahlbruch; Karsten Danzmann; Roman Schnabel
We theoretically analyze the quantum noise of signal-recycled laser interferometric gravitational-wave detectors with additional input and output optics, namely frequency-dependent squeezing of the vacuum entering the dark port and frequency-dependent homodyne detection. We combine the work of Buonanno and Chen on the quantum noise of signal-recycled interferometers with ordinary input-output optics, and the work of Kimble el al. on frequency-dependent input-output optics with conventional interferometers. Analytical formulas for the optimal input and output frequency dependencies are obtained. It is shown that injecting squeezed light with the optimal frequency-dependent squeezing angle into the dark port yields an improvement on the noise spectral density by a factor of exp(-2r) (in power) over the entire squeezing bandwidth, where r is the squeezing parameter. It is further shown that frequency-dependent (variational) homodyne read-out leads to an additional increase in sensitivity which is significant in the wings of the doubly resonant structure. The optimal variational input squeezing in case of an ordinary output homodyne detection is shown to be realizable by applying two optical filters on a frequency-independent squeezed vacuum. Throughout this paper, we take as example the signal-recycled topology currently being completed at the GEO600 site. However, theoretical results obtained here are also applicable to the proposed topology of Advanced LIGO.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2004
K. A. Strain; B. Allen; P. Aufmuth; Carsten Aulbert; S. Babak; R. Balasubramanian; B. Barr; Steven J. Berukoff; Alexander Bunkowski; G. Cagnoli; C. A. Cantley; M. M. Casey; S. Chelkowski; D. Churches; T. Cokelaer; Carlo Nicola Colacino; D. R. M. Crooks; Curt Cutler; Karsten Danzmann; R. Davies; R. J. Dupuis; E. J. Elliffe; Carsten Fallnich; A. Franzen; Andreas Freise; S. Goßler; A. Grant; H. Grote; S. Grunewald; J. Harms
The GEO 600 laser interferometer with 600m armlength is part of a worldwide network of gravitational wave detectors. GEO 600 is unique in having advanced multiple pendulum suspensions with a monolithic last stage and in employing a signal recycled optical design. This paper describes the recent commissioning of the interferometer and its operation in signal recycled mode.
Nature Physics | 2008
B. Hage; Aiko Samblowski; James DiGuglielmo; A. Franzen; Jaromir Fiurasek; Roman Schnabel
Two independent experiments demonstrate that quantum entanglement that has been lost in decoherence processes can be recovered. For the first time such ’entanglement distillation’ has been achieved for states of light that are entangled in continuous variables, which should help to increase the distance over which quantum information can be distributed.
Physical Review A | 2005
S. Chelkowski; H. Vahlbruch; B. Hage; A. Franzen; N. Lastzka; Karsten Danzmann; Roman Schnabel
We report on the demonstration of broadband squeezed laser beams that show a frequency-dependent orientation of the squeezing ellipse. Carrier frequency as well as quadrature angle were stably locked to a reference laser beam at 1064 nm. This frequency-dependent squeezing was characterized in terms of noise power spectra and contour plots of Wigner functions. The latter were measured by quantum state tomography. Our tomograph allowed a stable lock to a local oscillator beam for arbitrary quadrature angles with ±1° precision. Frequency-dependent orientations of the squeezing ellipse are necessary for squeezed states of light to provide a broadband sensitivity improvement in third-generation gravitational-wave interferometers. We consider the application of our system to long-baseline interferometers such as a future squeezed-light upgraded GEO 600 detector.
Physical Review Letters | 2006
A. Franzen; B. Hage; James DiGuglielmo; Jaromir Fiurasek; Roman Schnabel
We report on the first experimental demonstration of purification of nonclassical continuous variable states. The protocol uses two copies of phase-diffused states overlapped on a beam splitter and provides Gaussified, less mixed states with the degree of squeezing improved. The protocol uses only linear optical devices such as beam splitters and homodyne detection, thereby proving these optical elements can be used for successful purification of this type of state decoherence which occurs in optical transmission channels.
New Journal of Physics | 2007
B. Hage; A. Franzen; James DiGuglielmo; Petr Marek; Jaromir Fiurasek; Roman Schnabel
Recently it was discovered that non-Gaussian decoherence processes, such as phase-diffusion, can be counteracted by purification and distillation protocols that are solely built on Gaussian operations. Here, we make use of this experimentally highly accessible regime, and provide a detailed experimental and theoretical analysis of several strategies for purification/distillation protocols on phase-diffused squeezed states. Our results provide valuable information for the optimization of such protocols with respect to the choice of the trigger quadrature, the trigger threshold value and the probability of generating a distilled state.