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Dive into the research topics where Joseph M. Lukens is active.

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Featured researches published by Joseph M. Lukens.


Nature | 2013

A temporal cloak at telecommunication data rate

Joseph M. Lukens; Daniel E. Leaird; Andrew M. Weiner

Through advances in metamaterials—artificially engineered media with exotic properties, including negative refractive index—the once fanciful invisibility cloak has now assumed a prominent place in scientific research. By extending these concepts to the temporal domain, investigators have recently described a cloak which hides events in time by creating a temporal gap in a probe beam that is subsequently closed up; any interaction which takes place during this hole in time is not detected. However, these results are limited to isolated events that fill a tiny portion of the temporal period, giving a fractional cloaking window of only about 10−4 per cent at a repetition rate of 41 kilohertz (ref. 15)—which is much too low for applications such as optical communications. Here we demonstrate another technique for temporal cloaking, which operates at telecommunication data rates and, by exploiting temporal self-imaging through the Talbot effect, hides optical data from a receiver. We succeed in cloaking 46 per cent of the entire time axis and conceal pseudorandom digital data at a rate of 12.7 gigabits per second. This potential to cloak real-world messages introduces temporal cloaking into the sphere of practical application, with immediate ramifications in secure communications.


Optica | 2014

Temporal cloaking for data suppression and retrieval

Joseph M. Lukens; Andrew J. Metcalf; Daniel E. Leaird; Andrew M. Weiner

Recent research on time cloaking has revealed a fascinating approach to hide temporal events from an interrogating optical field, by opening up and subsequently closing intensity gaps in a probe beam. Experiments thus far have demonstrated temporal cloaking of nonlinear interactions and high-speed optical data. Here we report a temporal cloak with the new capability not only to hide optical data, but also to concurrently transmit it along another wavelength channel for subsequent readout, masking the information from one observer while directing it to another. Additionally, the cloak succeeds in passing modulated data unscathed through a scrambling event, providing a new form of tampering resistance. Both examples launch a paradigm shift in temporal cloaking: instead of using time cloaks primarily to disrupt communication, we show how they can also improve data transmission, in turn greatly widening the range of possible applications in telecommunications.


Optics Letters | 2013

Biphoton manipulation with a fiber-based pulse shaper

Joseph M. Lukens; Amir Dezfooliyan; Carsten Langrock; Martin M. Fejer; Daniel E. Leaird; Andrew M. Weiner

We demonstrate spectral shaping of entangled photons in the telecom band with a programmable, fiber-based optical filter. The fine-resolution spectral control permits implementation of length-40 Hadamard codes, through which we are able to verify frequency anticorrelation with a 20-fold increase in total counts over that permitted by the equivalent pair of monochromators at the same input flux. By programming the complex spectral transmission function corresponding to a Mach-Zehnder interferometer, we also construct variations on Franson interferometers that are free from mechanical instabilities, demonstrating spectral phase independence in the slow-detector limit, in which all temporal features are unobservable. Our configuration furnishes a single, compact arrangement for manipulating telecom biphotons and characterizing their quality.


Optics Express | 2018

50-GHz-spaced comb of high-dimensional frequency-bin entangled photons from an on-chip silicon nitride microresonator

Poolad Imany; Jose A. Jaramillo-Villegas; Ogaga D. Odele; Kyunghun Han; Daniel E. Leaird; Joseph M. Lukens; Pavel Lougovski; Minghao Qi; Andrew M. Weiner

Quantum frequency combs from chip-scale integrated sources are promising candidates for scalable and robust quantum information processing (QIP). However, to use these quantum combs for frequency domain QIP, demonstration of entanglement in the frequency basis, showing that the entangled photons are in a coherent superposition of multiple frequency bins, is required. We present a verification of qubit and qutrit frequency-bin entanglement using an on-chip quantum frequency comb with 40 mode pairs, through a two-photon interference measurement that is based on electro-optic phase modulation. Our demonstrations provide an important contribution in establishing integrated optical microresonators as a source for high-dimensional frequency-bin encoded quantum computing, as well as dense quantum key distribution.


Optics Express | 2014

Generation of biphoton correlation trains through spectral filtering

Joseph M. Lukens; Ogaga D. Odele; Carsten Langrock; Martin M. Fejer; Daniel E. Leaird; Andrew M. Weiner

We demonstrate the generation of two-photon correlation trains based on spectral filtering of broadband biphotons. Programmable amplitude filtering is employed to create biphoton frequency combs, which when coupled with optical dispersion allows us to experimentally verify the temporal Talbot effect for entangled photons. Additionally, an alternative spectral phase-filtering approach is shown to significantly improve the overall efficiency of the generation process when a comb-like spectrum is not required. Our technique is ideal for the creation of tunable and high-repetition-rate biphoton states.


Optics Letters | 2016

Naturally stable Sagnac-Michelson nonlinear interferometer

Joseph M. Lukens; Nicholas A. Peters; Raphael C. Pooser

Interferometers measure a wide variety of dynamic processes by converting a phase change into an intensity change. Nonlinear interferometers, making use of nonlinear media in lieu of beamsplitters, promise substantial improvement in the quest to reach the ultimate sensitivity limits. Here we demonstrate a new nonlinear interferometer utilizing a single parametric amplifier for mode mixing-conceptually, a nonlinear version of the conventional Michelson interferometer with its arms collapsed together. We observe up to 99.9% interference visibility and find evidence for noise reduction based on phase-sensitive gain. Our configuration utilizes fewer components than previous demonstrations and requires no active stabilization, offering new capabilities for practical nonlinear interferometric-based sensors.


Optics Letters | 2015

Electro-optic modulation for high-speed characterization of entangled photon pairs

Joseph M. Lukens; Ogaga D. Odele; Daniel E. Leaird; Andrew M. Weiner

We demonstrate a new biphoton manipulation and characterization technique based on electro-optic intensity modulation and time shifting. By applying fast modulation signals with a sharply peaked cross-correlation to each photon from an entangled pair, it is possible to measure temporal correlations with significantly higher precision than that attainable using standard single-photon detection. Low-duty-cycle pulses and maximal-length sequences are considered as modulation functions, reducing the time spread in our correlation measurement by a factor of five compared to our detector jitter. With state-of-the-art electro-optic components, we expect the potential to surpass the speed of any single-photon detectors currently available.


Optics Express | 2015

Tunable delay control of entangled photons based on dispersion cancellation

Ogaga D. Odele; Joseph M. Lukens; Jose A. Jaramillo-Villegas; Carsten Langrock; Martin M. Fejer; Daniel E. Leaird; Andrew M. Weiner

We propose and demonstrate a novel approach for controlling the temporal position of the biphoton correlation function using pump frequency tuning and dispersion cancellation; precise waveguide engineering enables biphoton generation at different pump frequencies while the idea of nonlocal dispersion cancellation is used to create the relative signal-idler delay and simultaneously prevents broadening of their correlation. Experimental results for delay shifts up to ±15 times the correlation width are shown along with discussions of the performance metrics of this approach.


Applied Physics Letters | 2018

Reconfigurable generation and measurement of mutually unbiased bases for time-bin qudits

Joseph M. Lukens; Nurul T. Islam; Charles Ci Wen Lim; Daniel J. Gauthier

We propose a method for implementing mutually unbiased generation and measurement of time-bin qudits using a cascade of electro-optic phase modulator–coded fiber Bragg grating pairs. Our approach requires only a single spatial mode and can switch rapidly between basis choices. We obtain explicit solutions for dimensions d = 2, 3, and 4 that realize all d + 1 possible mutually unbiased bases and analyze the performance of our approach in quantum key distribution. Given its practicality and compatibility with current technology, our approach provides a promising springboard for scalable processing of high-dimensional time-bin states.


Applied Physics Letters | 2018

A broadband fiber-optic nonlinear interferometer

Joseph M. Lukens; Raphael C. Pooser; Nicholas A. Peters

We describe an all-fiber nonlinear interferometer based on four-wave mixing in highly nonlinear fiber. Our configuration realizes phase-sensitive interference with 97% peak visibility and >90% visibility over a broad 554 GHz optical band. By comparing the output noise power to the shot-noise level, we confirm noise cancellation at dark interference fringes, as required for quantum-enhanced sensitivity. Our device extends nonlinear interferometry to the important platform of highly nonlinear optical fiber, and could find application in a variety of fiber-based sensors.

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Nicholas A. Peters

University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign

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