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Dive into the research topics where Mohammad Mirhosseini is active.

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Featured researches published by Mohammad Mirhosseini.


New Journal of Physics | 2015

High-dimensional quantum cryptography with twisted light

Mohammad Mirhosseini; Omar S. Magaña-Loaiza; Malcolm N. O’Sullivan; Brandon Rodenburg; Mehul Malik; Martin P. J. Lavery; Miles J. Padgett; Daniel J. Gauthier; Robert W. Boyd

Quantum key distribution (QKD) systems often rely on polarization of light for encoding, thus limiting the amount of information that can be sent per photon and placing tight bounds on the error rates that such a system can tolerate. Here we describe a proof-of-principle experiment that indicates the feasibility of high-dimensional QKD based on the transverse structure of the light field allowing for the transfer of more than 1 bit per photon. Our implementation uses the orbital angular momentum (OAM) of photons and the corresponding mutually unbiased basis of angular position (ANG). Our experiment uses a digital micro-mirror device for the rapid generation of OAM and ANG modes at 4 kHz, and a mode sorter capable of sorting single photons based on their OAM and ANG content with a separation efficiency of 93%. Through the use of a seven-dimensional alphabet encoded in the OAM and ANG bases, we achieve a channel capacity of 2.05 bits per sifted photon. Our experiment demonstrates that, in addition to having an increased information capacity, multilevel QKD systems based on spatial-mode encoding can be more resilient against intercept-resend eavesdropping attacks.


Optics Express | 2012

Influence of atmospheric turbulence on optical communications using orbital angular momentum for encoding

Mehul Malik; Malcolm N. O’Sullivan; Brandon Rodenburg; Mohammad Mirhosseini; Jonathan Leach; Martin P. J. Lavery; Miles J. Padgett; Robert W. Boyd

We describe an experimental implementation of a free-space 11-dimensional communication system using orbital angular momentum (OAM) modes. This system has a maximum measured OAM channel capacity of 2.12 bits/photon. The effects of Kolmogorov thin-phase turbulence on the OAM channel capacity are quantified. We find that increasing the turbulence leads to a degradation of the channel capacity. We are able to mitigate the effects of turbulence by increasing the spacing between detected OAM modes. This study has implications for high-dimensional quantum key distribution (QKD) systems. We describe the sort of QKD system that could be built using our current technology.


Optics Letters | 2012

Influence of atmospheric turbulence on states of light carrying orbital angular momentum

Brandon Rodenburg; Martin P. J. Lavery; Mehul Malik; Malcolm N. O’Sullivan; Mohammad Mirhosseini; David J. Robertson; Miles J. Padgett; Robert W. Boyd

We have experimentally studied the degradation of mode purity for light beams carrying orbital angular momentum (OAM) propagating through simulated atmospheric turbulence. The turbulence is modeled as a randomly varying phase aberration, which obeys statistics postulated by Kolmogorov turbulence theory. We introduce this simulated turbulence through the use of a phase-only spatial light modulator. Once the turbulence is introduced, the degradation in mode quality results in crosstalk between OAM modes. We study this crosstalk in OAM for 11 modes, showing that turbulence uniformly degrades the purity of all the modes within this range, irrespective of mode number.


Optics Express | 2013

Rapid generation of light beams carrying orbital angular momentum.

Mohammad Mirhosseini; Omar S. Magaña-Loaiza; Changchen Chen; Brandon Rodenburg; Mehul Malik; Robert W. Boyd

We report a technique for encoding both amplitude and phase variations onto a laser beam using a single digital micro-mirror device (DMD). Using this technique, we generate Laguerre-Gaussian and vortex orbital-angular-momentum (OAM) modes, along with modes in a set that is mutually unbiased with respect to the OAM basis. Additionally, we have demonstrated rapid switching among the generated modes at a speed of 4 kHz, which is much faster than the speed regularly achieved by phase-only spatial light modulators (SLMs). The dynamic control of both phase and amplitude of a laser beam is an enabling technology for classical communication and quantum key distribution (QKD) systems that employ spatial mode encoding.


Optics Express | 2012

Near-perfect sorting of orbital angular momentum and angular position states of light.

Malcolm N. O’Sullivan; Mohammad Mirhosseini; Mehul Malik; Robert W. Boyd

We present a novel method for efficient sorting of photons prepared in states of orbital angular momentum (OAM) and angular position (ANG). A log-polar optical transform is used in combination with a holographic beam-splitting method to achieve better mode discrimination and reduced cross-talk than reported previously. Simulating this method for 7 modes, we have calculated an improved mutual information of 2.43 bits/photon and 2.29 bits/photon for OAM and ANG modes respectively. In addition, we present preliminary results from an experimental implementation of this technique. This method is expected to have important applications for high-dimensional quantum key distribution systems.


New Journal of Physics | 2014

Simulating thick atmospheric turbulence in the lab with application to orbital angular momentum communication

Brandon Rodenburg; Mohammad Mirhosseini; Mehul Malik; Omar S. Magaña-Loaiza; Michael Yanakas; Laura Maher; Nicholas K. Steinhoff; Glenn A. Tyler; Robert W. Boyd

We describe a procedure by which a long () optical path through atmospheric turbulence can be experimentally simulated in a controlled fashion and scaled down to distances easily accessible in a laboratory setting. This procedure is then used to simulate a 1 km long free-space communication link in which information is encoded in orbital angular momentum spatial modes. We also demonstrate that standard adaptive optics methods can be used to mitigate many of the effects of thick atmospheric turbulence.


Physical Review Letters | 2014

Compressive Direct Measurement of the Quantum Wave Function

Mohammad Mirhosseini; Omar S. Magaña-Loaiza; Hashemi Rafsanjani Sm; Robert W. Boyd

The direct measurement of a complex wave function has been recently realized by using weak values. In this Letter, we introduce a method that exploits sparsity for the compressive measurement of the transverse spatial wave function of photons. The procedure involves weak measurements of random projection operators in the spatial domain followed by postselection in the momentum basis. Using this method, we experimentally measure a 192-dimensional state with a fidelity of 90% using only 25 percent of the total required measurements. Furthermore, we demonstrate the measurement of a 19,200-dimensional state, a task that would require an unfeasibly large acquiring time with the standard direct measurement technique.


Optics Letters | 2015

Q-plates as higher order polarization controllers for orbital angular momentum modes of fiber.

Patrick Gregg; Mohammad Mirhosseini; Andrea Rubano; Lorenzo Marrucci; Ebrahim Karimi; Robert W. Boyd

We demonstrate that a |q|=1/2 plate, in conjunction with appropriate polarization optics, can selectively and switchably excite all linear combinations of the first radial mode order |l|=1 orbital angular momentum (OAM) fiber modes. This enables full mapping of free-space polarization states onto fiber vector modes, including the radially (TM) and azimuthally polarized (TE) modes. The setup requires few optical components and can yield mode purities as high as ∼30  dB. Additionally, just as a conventional fiber polarization controller creates arbitrary elliptical polarization states to counteract fiber birefringence and yield desired polarizations at the output of a single-mode fiber, q-plates disentangle degenerate state mixing effects between fiber OAM states to yield pure states, even after long-length fiber propagation. We thus demonstrate the ability to switch dynamically, potentially at ∼GHz rates, between OAM modes, or create desired linear combinations of them. We envision applications in fiber-based lasers employing vector or OAM mode outputs, as well as communications networking schemes exploiting spatial modes for higher dimensional encoding.


Physical Review A | 2015

State transfer based on classical nonseparability

Seyed Mohammad Hashemi Rafsanjani; Mohammad Mirhosseini; Omar S. Magaña-Loaiza; Robert W. Boyd

We present a state transfer protocol that is mathematically equivalent to quantum teleportation, but uses classical nonseparability instead of quantum entanglement. In our implementation we take advantage of nonseparability among three parties: orbital angular momentum (OAM), polarization, and the radial degrees of freedom of a beam of light. We demonstrate the transfer of arbitrary OAM states, in the subspace spanned by any two OAM states, to the polarization of the same beam.


Journal of The Optical Society of America B-optical Physics | 2014

Experimental generation of an optical field with arbitrary spatial coherence properties

Brandon Rodenburg; Mohammad Mirhosseini; Omar S. Magaña-Loaiza; Robert W. Boyd

We describe an experimental technique for generating a quasi-monochromatic field with any arbitrary spatial coherence properties that can be described by the cross-spectral density function, W(r1,r2). This is done by using a dynamic binary amplitude grating generated by a digital micromirror device to rapidly alternate between a set of coherent fields, creating an incoherent mix of modes that represent the coherent mode decomposition of the desired W(r1,r2). This method was then demonstrated experimentally by interfering two plane waves and then spatially varying the coherence between them. It is then shown that this creates an interference pattern between the two beams whose fringe visibility varies spatially in an arbitrary and prescribed way.

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Zhimin Shi

University of South Florida

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Yiyu Zhou

University of Rochester

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