Lee A. Rozema
University of Toronto
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Lee A. Rozema.
Physical Review Letters | 2013
Dylan H. Mahler; Lee A. Rozema; Ardavan Darabi; Christopher Ferrie; Robin Blume-Kohout; Aephraim M. Steinberg
We introduce a simple protocol for adaptive quantum state tomography, which reduces the worst-case infidelity [1-F(ρ,ρ)] between the estimate and the true state from O(1/sqrt[N]) to O(1/N). It uses a single adaptation step and just one extra measurement setting. In a linear optical qubit experiment, we demonstrate a full order of magnitude reduction in infidelity (from 0.1% to 0.01%) for a modest number of samples (N ≈ 3 × 10(4)).
Physical Review Letters | 2014
Lee A. Rozema; James D. Bateman; Dylan H. Mahler; Ryo Okamoto; Amir Feizpour; Alex Hayat; Aephraim M. Steinberg
We demonstrate spatial super-resolution, performing an optical centroid measurement on 4-photon N00N states with a scalable 11-detector measurement. Our results show spatial super-resolution with exponentially better detection efficiency than any previous N00N-state experiment.
Science Advances | 2016
Dylan H. Mahler; Lee A. Rozema; Kent A. G. Fisher; Lydia Vermeyden; Kevin J. Resch; Howard Mark Wiseman; Aephraim M. Steinberg
Researchers reconstruct trajectories of two entangled photons showing the nonlocal and “surreal” nature of the trajectories in Bohmian mechanics. Weak measurement allows one to empirically determine a set of average trajectories for an ensemble of quantum particles. However, when two particles are entangled, the trajectories of the first particle can depend nonlocally on the position of the second particle. Moreover, the theory describing these trajectories, called Bohmian mechanics, predicts trajectories that were at first deemed “surreal” when the second particle is used to probe the position of the first particle. We entangle two photons and determine a set of Bohmian trajectories for one of them using weak measurements and postselection. We show that the trajectories seem surreal only if one ignores their manifest nonlocality.
Physical Review Letters | 2012
Alex Hayat; Christoph Lange; Lee A. Rozema; Ardavan Darabi; Henry M. van Driel; Aephraim M. Steinberg; Bryan Nelsen; David W. Snoke; Loren Pfeiffer; K. W. West
We present experimental observations of a nonresonant dynamic Stark shift in strongly coupled microcavity quantum well exciton polaritons--a system which provides a rich variety of solid-state collective phenomena. The Stark effect is demonstrated in a GaAs/AlGaAs system at 10 K by femtosecond pump-probe measurements, with the blueshift approaching the meV scale for a pump fluence of 2 mJ cm(-2) and 50 meV red detuning, in good agreement with theory. The energy level structure of the strongly coupled polariton Rabi doublet remains unaffected by the blueshift. The demonstrated effect should allow generation of ultrafast density-independent potentials and imprinting well-defined phase profiles on polariton condensates, providing a powerful tool for manipulation of these condensates, similar to dipole potentials in cold-atom systems.
New Journal of Physics | 2012
Agata M. Brańczyk; Dylan H. Mahler; Lee A. Rozema; Ardavan Darabi; Aephraim M. Steinberg; Daniel F. V. James
We introduce and experimentally demonstrate a technique for performing quantum state tomography (QST) on multiple-qubit states despite incomplete knowledge about the unitary operations used to change the measurement basis. Given unitary operations with unknown rotation angles, our method can be used to reconstruct the density matrix of the state up to local rotations as well as recover the magnitude of the unknown rotation angle. We demonstrate high-fidelity self-calibrating tomography on polarization-encoded one- and two-photon states. The unknown unitary operations are realized in two ways: using a birefringent polymer sheet—an inexpensive smartphone screen protector—or alternatively a liquid crystal wave plate with a tuneable retardance. We explore how our technique may be adapted for QST of systems such as biological molecules where the magnitude and orientation of the transition dipole moment is not known with high accuracy.
Science Advances | 2017
Giulia Rubino; Lee A. Rozema; Adrien Feix; Mateus Araújo; Jonas Zeuner; Lorenzo M. Procopio; Caslav Brukner; Philip Walther
Researchers report on the observation and characterization of a quantum process that lacks a predefined causal order. Investigating the role of causal order in quantum mechanics has recently revealed that the causal relations of events may not be a priori well defined in quantum theory. Although this has triggered a growing interest on the theoretical side, creating processes without a causal order is an experimental task. We report the first decisive demonstration of a process with an indefinite causal order. To do this, we quantify how incompatible our setup is with a definite causal order by measuring a “causal witness.” This mathematical object incorporates a series of measurements that are designed to yield a certain outcome only if the process under examination is not consistent with any well-defined causal order. In our experiment, we perform a measurement in a superposition of causal orders—without destroying the coherence—to acquire information both inside and outside of a “causally nonordered process.” Using this information, we experimentally determine a causal witness, demonstrating by almost 7 SDs that the experimentally implemented process does not have a definite causal order.
arXiv: Quantum Physics | 2015
Lee A. Rozema; Chao Wang; Dylan H. Mahler; Alex Hayat; Aephraim M. Steinberg; J. E. Sipe; Marco Liscidini
Entangled-photon pairs are essential for many applications in quantum computation and communication, and quantum state tomography (QST) is the universal tool to characterize such entangled-photon sources. In QST, very low-power signals must be measured with single-photon detectors and coincidence logic. Here, we experimentally implement a new protocol, “stimulated-emission tomography” (SET), allowing us to obtain the information provided by QST when the photon pairs are generated by parametric fluorescence. This approach exploits a stimulated process that results in a signal several orders of magnitude larger than in QST. In particular, we characterize the polarization state of photons that would be generated in spontaneous parametric downconversion using SET. We find that SET accurately predicts the purity and concurrence of the spontaneously generated photons in agreement with the results of QST. We expect that SET will be extremely useful to characterize entanglement sources based on parametric fluorescence, providing a fast and efficient technique to potentially replace or supplement QST.
Physical Review Letters | 2014
Lee A. Rozema; Dylan H. Mahler; Alex Hayat; Peter S. Turner; Aephraim M. Steinberg
Data compression is a ubiquitous aspect of modern information technology, and the advent of quantum information raises the question of what types of compression are feasible for quantum data, where it is especially relevant given the extreme difficulty involved in creating reliable quantum memories. We present a protocol in which an ensemble of quantum bits (qubits) can in principle be perfectly compressed into exponentially fewer qubits. We then experimentally implement our algorithm, compressing three photonic qubits into two. This protocol sheds light on the subtle differences between quantum and classical information. Furthermore, since data compression stores all of the available information about the quantum state in fewer physical qubits, it could allow for a vast reduction in the amount of quantum memory required to store a quantum ensemble, making even todays limited quantum memories far more powerful than previously recognized.
Physics World | 2013
Aephraim M. Steinberg; Amir Feizpour; Lee A. Rozema; Dylan H. Mahler; Alex Hayat
Quantum physics is being transformed by a radical new conceptual and experimental approach known as weak measurement that can do everything from tackling basic quantum mysteries to mapping the trajectories of photons in a Youngs double-slit experiment. Aephraim Steinberg, Amir Feizpour, Lee Rozema, Dylan Mahler and Alex Hayat unveil the power of this new technique.
Nature Communications | 2017
Lorenzo M. Procopio; Lee A. Rozema; Zi Jing Wong; Deny R. Hamel; Kevin O’Brien; Xiang Zhang; Borivoje Dakic; Philip Walther
In standard quantum mechanics, complex numbers are used to describe the wavefunction. Although this has so far proven sufficient to predict experimental results, there is no theoretical reason to choose them over real numbers or generalizations of complex numbers, that is, hyper-complex numbers. Experiments performed to date have proven that real numbers are insufficient, but the need for hyper-complex numbers remains an open question. Here we experimentally probe hyper-complex quantum theories, studying one of their deviations from complex quantum theory: the non-commutativity of phases. We do so by passing single photons through a Sagnac interferometer containing both a metamaterial with a negative refractive index, and a positive phase shifter. To accomplish this we engineered a fishnet metamaterial to have a negative refractive index at 780 nm. We show that the metamaterial phase commutes with other phases with high precision, allowing us to place limits on a particular prediction of hyper-complex quantum theories.