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Dive into the research topics where S. P. Walborn is active.

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Featured researches published by S. P. Walborn.


Physical Review A | 2012

One-sided device-independent quantum key distribution: Security, feasibility, and the connection with steering

Cyril Branciard; Eric G. Cavalcanti; S. P. Walborn; Valerio Scarani; Howard Mark Wiseman

We analyze the security and feasibility of a protocol for quantum key distribution (QKD) in a context where only one of the two parties trusts his measurement apparatus. This scenario lies naturally between standard QKD, where both parties trust their measurement apparatuses, and device-independent QKD (DI-QKD), where neither do, and can be a natural assumption in some practical situations. We show that the requirements for obtaining secure keys are much easier to meet than for DI-QKD, which opens promising experimental opportunities. We clarify the link between the security of this one-sided DI-QKD scenario and the demonstration of quantum steering, in analogy to the link between DI-QKD and the violation of Bell inequalities.


international quantum electronics conference | 2013

Complete experimental toolbox for alignment-free quantum communication

Vincenzo D'Ambrosio; Eleonora Nagali; S. P. Walborn; Leandro Aolita; Sergei Slussarenko; Lorenzo Marrucci; Fabio Sciarrino

We developed a complete experimental toolbox to prove the communication possibility through the feasibility demonstration of a cryptographic-key distribution protocol, distribution of entanglement, and violation of a Bell inequality, all in alignment-free settings, i .e . by rotating the reference frame of the receiver.


Physical Review A | 2008

Experimental investigation of the dynamics of entanglement: Sudden death, complementarity, and continuous monitoring of the environment

A. Salles; F. de Melo; M. P. Almeida; M. Hor-Meyll; S. P. Walborn; P. H. Souto Ribeiro; L. Davidovich

We report on an experimental investigation of the dynamics of entanglement between a single qubit and its environment, as well as for pairs of qubits interacting independently with individual environments, using photons obtained from parametric down-conversion. The qubits are encoded in the polarizations of single photons, while the interaction with the environment is implemented by coupling the polarization of each photon with its momentum. A convenient Sagnac interferometer allows for the implementation of several decoherence channels and for the continuous monitoring of the environment. For an initially entangled photon pair, one observes the vanishing of entanglement before coherence disappears. For a single qubit interacting with an environment, the dynamics of the complementarity relations connecting single-qubit properties and its entanglement with the environment is experimentally determined. The evolution of a single qubit under continuous monitoring of the environment is investigated, demonstrating that a qubit may decay even when the environment is found in the unexcited state. This implies that entanglement can be increased by local continuous monitoring, which is equivalent to entanglement distillation. We also present a detailed analysis of the transfer of entanglement from the two-qubit system to the two corresponding environments, between which entanglement may suddenly appear, and show instances for which no entanglement is created between dephasing environments, nor between either of them and the corresponding qubit: the initial two-qubit entanglement gets transformed into legitimate multiqubit entanglement of the Greenberger-Horne-Zeilinger type.


Nature | 2006

Experimental determination of entanglement with a single measurement

S. P. Walborn; P. H. Souto Ribeiro; L. Davidovich; Florian Mintert; Andreas Buchleitner

Nearly all protocols requiring shared quantum information—such as quantum teleportation or key distribution—rely on entanglement between distant parties. However, entanglement is difficult to characterize experimentally. All existing techniques for doing so, including entanglement witnesses or Bell inequalities, disclose the entanglement of some quantum states but fail for other states; therefore, they cannot provide satisfactory results in general. Such methods are fundamentally different from entanglement measures that, by definition, quantify the amount of entanglement in any state. However, these measures suffer from the severe disadvantage that they typically are not directly accessible in laboratory experiments. Here we report a linear optics experiment in which we directly observe a pure-state entanglement measure, namely concurrence. Our measurement set-up includes two copies of a quantum state: these ‘twin’ states are prepared in the polarization and momentum degrees of freedom of two photons, and concurrence is measured with a single, local measurement on just one of the photons.


Physical Review A | 2003

Hyperentanglement-assisted Bell-state analysis

S. P. Walborn; S. Pádua; C. H. Monken

We propose a simple scheme for complete Bell-state measurement of photons using hyperentangled states-entangled in multiple degrees of freedom. In addition to hyperentanglement, our scheme requires only linear optics and single photon detectors, and is realizable with current technology. At the cost of additional classical communication, our Bell-state measurement can be implemented nonlocally. We discuss the possible application of these results to quantum dense coding and quantum teleportation.


Physical Review Letters | 2006

Quantum key distribution with higher-order alphabets using spatially encoded qudits

S. P. Walborn; D. S. Lemelle; M. P. Almeida; P. H. Souto Ribeiro

We present a proof of principle demonstration of a quantum key distribution scheme in higher-order -dimensional alphabets using spatial degrees of freedom of photons. Our implementation allows for the transmission of 4.56 bits per sifted photon, while providing improved security: an intercept-resend attack on all photons would induce an average error rate of 0.47. Using our system, it should be possible to send more than a byte of information per sifted photon.


Nature Communications | 2013

Photonic polarization gears for ultra-sensitive angular measurements

Vincenzo D'Ambrosio; Nicolò Spagnolo; Lorenzo Del Re; Sergei Slussarenko; Ying Li; Leong Chuan Kwek; Lorenzo Marrucci; S. P. Walborn; Leandro Aolita; Fabio Sciarrino

Quantum metrology bears a great promise in enhancing measurement precision, but is unlikely to become practical in the near future. Its concepts can nevertheless inspire classical or hybrid methods of immediate value. Here we demonstrate NOON-like photonic states of m quanta of angular momentum up to m=100, in a setup that acts as a ‘photonic gear’, converting, for each photon, a mechanical rotation of an angle θ into an amplified rotation of the optical polarization by mθ, corresponding to a ‘super-resolving’ Malus’ law. We show that this effect leads to single-photon angular measurements with the same precision of polarization-only quantum strategies with m photons, but robust to photon losses. Moreover, we combine the gear effect with the quantum enhancement due to entanglement, thus exploiting the advantages of both approaches. The high ‘gear ratio’ m boosts the current state of the art of optical non-contact angular measurements by almost two orders of magnitude.


Journal of Optics B-quantum and Semiclassical Optics | 2005

Implementing the Deutsch algorithm with polarization and transverse spatial modes

A. N. de Oliveira; S. P. Walborn; C. H. Monken

In this paper we implement a simple quantum algorithm using polarization and transverse spatial modes of the electromagnetic field as qubits. The transverse spatial modes used are the Laguerre–Gaussian and Hermite–Gaussian beams of order N = 1. With these two qubits carried by the same photon, we have implemented the Deutsch algorithm using a simple linear optical setup.


Physical Review Letters | 2014

Non-Markovianity through Accessible Information

F. F. Fanchini; Göktuğ Karpat; Barış Çakmak; L. K. Castelano; G. H. Aguilar; O. Jiménez Farías; S. P. Walborn; P. H. Souto Ribeiro; M. C. de Oliveira

The degree of non-Markovianity of quantum processes has been characterized in several different ways in the recent literature. However, the relationship between the non-Markovian behavior and the flow of information between the system and the environment through an entropic measure has not been yet established. We propose an entanglement-based measure of non-Markovianity by employing the concept of assisted knowledge, where the environment E, acquires information about a system S, by means of its measurement apparatus A. The assisted knowledge, based on the accessible information in terms of von-Neumann entropy, monotonically increases in time for all Markovian quantum processes. We demonstrate that the signatures of non-Markovianity can be captured by the nonmonotonic behaviour of the assisted knowledge. We explore this scenario for a two-level system undergoing a relaxation process, through an experimental implementation using an optical approach that allows full access to the state of the environment.


Physical Review Letters | 2003

Multimode Hong-Ou-mandel interference.

S. P. Walborn; A. N. de Oliveira; S. Pádua; C. H. Monken

We consider multimode two-photon interference at a beam splitter by photons created by spontaneous parametric down-conversion. The resulting interference pattern is shown to depend upon the transverse spatial symmetry of the pump beam. In an experiment, we employ the first-order Hermite-Gaussian modes in order to show that, by manipulating the pump beam, one can control the resulting two-photon interference behavior. We expect these results to play an important role in the engineering of quantum states of light for use in quantum information processing and quantum imaging.

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P. H. Souto Ribeiro

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Fabricio Toscano

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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C. H. Monken

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

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L. Davidovich

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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A. Salles

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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G. H. Aguilar

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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M. P. Almeida

University of Queensland

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M. Hor-Meyll

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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S. Pádua

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

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