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Dive into the research topics where Manuel Erhard is active.

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Featured researches published by Manuel Erhard.


Nature Photonics | 2016

Multi-photon entanglement in high dimensions

Mehul Malik; Manuel Erhard; Marcus Huber; Mario Krenn; Robert Fickler; Anton Zeilinger

A three-photon entangled state with 3 × 3 × 2 dimensions of its orbital angular momentum is created by using two independent entangled photon pairs from two nonlinear crystals, enabling the development of a new layered quantum communication protocol. Forming the backbone of quantum technologies today, entanglement1,2 has been demonstrated in physical systems as diverse as photons3, ions4 and superconducting circuits5. Although steadily pushing the boundary of the number of particles entangled, these experiments have remained in a two-dimensional space for each particle. Here we show the experimental generation of the first multi-photon entangled state where both the number of particles and dimensions are greater than two. Two photons in our state reside in a three-dimensional space, whereas the third lives in two dimensions. This asymmetric entanglement structure6 only appears in multiparticle entangled states with d > 26. Our method relies on combining two pairs of photons, high-dimensionally entangled in their orbital angular momentum7. In addition, we show how this state enables a new type of ‘layered’ quantum communication protocol. Entangled states such as these serve as a manifestation of the complex dance of correlations that can exist within quantum mechanics.


Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A | 2017

Orbital angular momentum of photons and the entanglement of Laguerre-Gaussian modes

Mario Krenn; Mehul Malik; Manuel Erhard; Anton Zeilinger

The identification of orbital angular momentum (OAM) as a fundamental property of a beam of light nearly 25 years ago has led to an extensive body of research around this topic. The possibility that single photons can carry OAM has made this degree of freedom an ideal candidate for the investigation of complex quantum phenomena and their applications. Research in this direction has ranged from experiments on complex forms of quantum entanglement to the interaction between light and quantum states of matter. Furthermore, the use of OAM in quantum information has generated a lot of excitement, as it allows for encoding large amounts of information on a single photon. Here, we explain the intuition that led to the first quantum experiment with OAM 15 years ago. We continue by reviewing some key experiments investigating fundamental questions on photonic OAM and the first steps to applying these properties in novel quantum protocols. At the end, we identify several interesting open questions that could form the subject of future investigations with OAM. This article is part of the themed issue ‘Optical orbital angular momentum’.


Physical Review Letters | 2017

High-Dimensional Single-Photon Quantum Gates: Concepts and Experiments

Amin Babazadeh; Manuel Erhard; Feiran Wang; Mehul Malik; Rahman Nouroozi; Mario Krenn; Anton Zeilinger

Transformations on quantum states form a basic building block of every quantum information system. From photonic polarization to two-level atoms, complete sets of quantum gates for a variety of qubit systems are well known. For multilevel quantum systems beyond qubits, the situation is more challenging. The orbital angular momentum modes of photons comprise one such high-dimensional system for which generation and measurement techniques are well studied. However, arbitrary transformations for such quantum states are not known. Here we experimentally demonstrate a four-dimensional generalization of the Pauli X gate and all of its integer powers on single photons carrying orbital angular momentum. Together with the well-known Z gate, this forms the first complete set of high-dimensional quantum gates implemented experimentally. The concept of the X gate is based on independent access to quantum states with different parities and can thus be generalized to other photonic degrees of freedom and potentially also to other quantum systems.


Light-Science & Applications | 2018

Twisted photons: new quantum perspectives in high dimensions

Manuel Erhard; Robert Fickler; Mario Krenn; Anton Zeilinger

Twisted photons can be used as alphabets to encode information beyond one bit per single photon. This ability offers great potential for quantum information tasks, as well as for the investigation of fundamental questions. In this review article, we give a brief overview of the theoretical differences between qubits and higher dimensional systems, qudits, in different quantum information scenarios. We then describe recent experimental developments in this field over the past three years. Finally, we summarize some important experimental and theoretical questions that might be beneficial to understand better in the near future.


Optica | 2017

Generation of the complete four-dimensional Bell basis

Feiran Wang; Manuel Erhard; Amin Babazadeh; Mehul Malik; Mario Krenn; Anton Zeilinger

The Bell basis is a distinctive set of maximally entangled two-particle quantum states that forms the foundation for many quantum protocols such as teleportation, dense coding and entanglement swapping. While the generation, manipulation, and measurement of two-level quantum states is well understood, the same is not true in higher dimensions. Here we present the experimental generation of a complete set of Bell states in a four-dimensional Hilbert space, comprising of 16 orthogonal entangled Bell-like states encoded in the orbital angular momentum of photons. The states are created by the application of generalized high-dimensional Pauli gates on an initial entangled state. Our results pave the way for the application of high-dimensional quantum states in complex quantum protocols such as quantum dense coding.


arXiv: Quantum Physics | 2017

A quantum router for high-dimensional entanglement

Manuel Erhard; Mehul Malik; Anton Zeilinger

In addition to being a workhorse for modern quantum technologies, entanglement plays a key role in fundamental tests of quantum mechanics. The entanglement of photons in multiple levels, or dimensions, explores the limits of how large an entangled state can be, while also greatly expanding its applications in quantum information. Here we show how a high-dimensional quantum state of two photons entangled in their orbital angular momentum can be split into two entangled states with a smaller dimensionality structure. Our work demonstrates that entanglement is a quantum property that can be subdivided into spatially separated parts. In addition, our technique has vast potential applications in quantum as well as classical communication systems.


Nature Photonics | 2018

Experimental Greenberger–Horne–Zeilinger entanglement beyond qubits

Manuel Erhard; Mehul Malik; Mario Krenn; Anton Zeilinger

The Greenberger-Horne-Zeilinger (GHZ) argument provides an all-or-nothing contradiction between quantum mechanics and local-realistic theories. In its original formulation, GHZ investigated three and four particles entangled in two dimensions only. Very recently, higher dimensional contradictions especially in three dimensions and three particles have been discovered but it has remained unclear how to produce such states. In this article we experimentally show how to generate a three-dimensional GHZ state from two-photon orbital-angular-momentum entanglement. The first suggestion for a setup which generates three-dimensional GHZ entanglement from these entangled pairs came from using the computer algorithm MELVIN. The procedure employs novel concepts significantly beyond the qubit case. Our experiment opens up the possibility of a truly high-dimensional test of the GHZ-contradiction which, interestingly, employs non-Hermitian operators.


Quantum Information and Measurement | 2017

A Quantum Router for High-dimensional Entanglement: Concepts and Applications

Mehul Malik; Manuel Erhard; Amin Babazadeh; Feiran Wang; Mario Krenn; Rahman Nouroozi; Anton Zeilinger

We demonstrate a device that splits a high-dimensional entangled state into two states of smaller dimension. Using this device, we generate the first high-dimensional multi-photon entangled state and demonstrate single-photon qudit logic gates.


arXiv: Quantum Physics | 2017

Experimental GHZ Entanglement beyond Qubits

Manuel Erhard; Mehul Malik; Mario Krenn; Anton Zeilinger


Archive | 2018

Quantum Experiments and Graphs II: Computation and State Generation with Probabilistic Sources and Linear Optics

Xuemei Gu; Mario Krenn; Manuel Erhard; Anton Zeilinger

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Anton Zeilinger

Austrian Academy of Sciences

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Marcus Huber

Austrian Academy of Sciences

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