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Dive into the research topics where Sonja Franke-Arnold is active.

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Featured researches published by Sonja Franke-Arnold.


Optics Express | 2004

Free-space information transfer using light beams carrying orbital angular momentum

Graham M. Gibson; Johannes Courtial; Miles J. Padgett; M. V. Vasnetsov; Valeriy Pas’ko; Stephen M. Barnett; Sonja Franke-Arnold

We demonstrate the transfer of information encoded as orbital angular momentum (OAM) states of a light beam. The transmitter and receiver units are based on spatial light modulators, which prepare or measure a laser beam in one of eight pure OAM states. We show that the information encoded in this way is resistant to eavesdropping in the sense that any attempt to sample the beam away from its axis will be subject to an angular restriction and a lateral offset, both of which result in inherent uncertainty in the measurement. This gives an experimental insight into the effects of aperturing and misalignment of the beam on the OAM measurement and demonstrates the uncertainty relationship for OAM.


Science | 2010

Quantum correlations in optical angle-orbital angular momentum variables

Jonathan Leach; Barry Jack; Jacqui Romero; Anand K. Jha; Alison M. Yao; Sonja Franke-Arnold; D. G. Ireland; Robert W. Boyd; Stephen M. Barnett; Miles J. Padgett

Entanglement in a Twist The strong correlations observed in quantum mechanically entangled particles, such as photons, offer potential for secure communication and quantum information processing. Leach et al. (p. 662) now show such strong quantum correlations between the complementary variables—angular position and orbital angular momentum—of two photons created during the parametric down-conversion process in a nonlinear crystal. This demonstration of entanglement in an angular basis establishes that angles are genuine quantum observables and can therefore be considered a resource for quantum information processing, capable of secure, high-dimension, key distribution. Strong quantum correlations are induced between the angular position and angular momentum of two photons. Entanglement of the properties of two separated particles constitutes a fundamental signature of quantum mechanics and is a key resource for quantum information science. We demonstrate strong Einstein, Podolsky, and Rosen correlations between the angular position and orbital angular momentum of two photons created by the nonlinear optical process of spontaneous parametric down-conversion. The discrete nature of orbital angular momentum and the continuous but periodic nature of angular position give rise to a special sort of entanglement between these two variables. The resulting correlations are found to be an order of magnitude stronger than those allowed by the uncertainty principle for independent (nonentangled) particles. Our results suggest that angular position and orbital angular momentum may find important applications in quantum information science.


Optics Express | 2007

Optical ferris wheel for ultracold atoms

Sonja Franke-Arnold; Jonathan Leach; Miles J. Padgett; V. E. Lembessis; Demosthenes Ellinas; Amanda J. Wright; John M. Girkin; Patrik Ohberg; Aidan S. Arnold

We propose a versatile optical ring lattice suitable for trapping cold and quantum degenerate atomic samples. We demonstrate the realisation of intensity patterns from pairs of Laguerre-Gauss (exp(i??) modes with different ? indices. These patterns can be rotated by introducing a frequency shift between the modes. We can generate bright ring lattices for trapping atoms in red-detuned light, and dark ring lattices suitable for trapping atoms with minimal heating in the optical vortices of blue-detuned light. The lattice sites can be joined to form a uniform ring trap, making it ideal for studying persistent currents and the Mott insulator transition in a ring geometry.


New Journal of Physics | 2004

Uncertainty principle for angular position and angular momentum

Sonja Franke-Arnold; Stephen M. Barnett; Eric Yao; Jonathan Leach; Johannes Courtial; Miles J. Padgett

The uncertainty principle places fundamental limits on the accuracy with which we are able to measure the values of different physical quantities (Heisenberg 1949 The Physical Principles of the Quantum Theory (New York: Dover); Robertson 1929 Phys. Rev. 34 127). This has profound effects not only on the microscopic but also on the macroscopic level of physical systems. The most familiar form of the uncertainty principle relates the uncertainties in position and linear momentum. Other manifestations include those relating uncertainty in energy to uncertainty in time duration, phase of an electromagnetic field to photon number and angular position to angular momentum (Vaccaro and Pegg 1990 J. Mod. Opt. 37 17; Barnett and Pegg 1990 Phys. Rev. A 41 3427). In this paper, we report the first observation of the last of these uncertainty relations and derive the associated states that satisfy the equality in the uncertainty relation. We confirm the form of these states by detailed measurement of the angular momentum of a light beam after passage through an appropriate angular aperture. The angular uncertainty principle applies to all physical systems and is particularly important for systems with cylindrical symmetry.


Optics Express | 2008

Light beams with fractional orbital angular momentum and their vortex structure

Jörg B. Götte; Kevin O'Holleran; Daryl Preece; Florian Flossmann; Sonja Franke-Arnold; Stephen M. Barnett; Miles J. Padgett

Light emerging from a spiral phase plate with a non-integer phase step has a complicated vortex structure and is unstable on propagation. We generate light carrying fractional orbital angular momentum (OAM) not with a phase step but by a synthesis of Laguerre-Gaussian modes. By limiting the number of different Gouy phases in the superposition we produce a light beam which is well characterised in terms of its propagation. We believe that their structural stability makes these beams ideal for quantum information processes utilising fractional OAM states.


Optics Express | 2009

Violation of a Bell inequality in two-dimensional orbital angular momentum state-spaces

Jonathan Leach; Barry Jack; Jacquiline Romero; Monika Ritsch-Marte; Robert W. Boyd; Anand K. Jha; Stephen M. Barnett; Sonja Franke-Arnold; Miles J. Padgett

We observe entanglement between photons in controlled super-position states of orbital angular momentum (OAM). By drawing a direct analogy between OAM and polarization states of light, we demonstrate the entangled nature of high order OAM states generated by spontaneous downconversion through violation of a suitable Clauser Horne Shimony Holt (CHSH)-Bell inequality. We demonstrate this violation in a number of two-dimensional subspaces of the higher dimensional OAM Hilbert space.


Physical Review Letters | 2012

Trans-spectral orbital angular momentum transfer via four-wave mixing in Rb vapor

Graeme Walker; Aidan S. Arnold; Sonja Franke-Arnold

We report the transfer of phase structure and, in particular, of orbital angular momentum from near-infrared pump light to blue light generated in a four-wave-mixing process in 85Rb vapor. The intensity and phase profile of the two pump lasers at 780 and 776 nm, shaped by a spatial light modulator, influences the phase and intensity profile of light at 420 nm, which is generated in a subsequent coherent cascade. In particular, we observe that the phase profile associated with orbital angular momentum is transferred entirely from the pump light to the blue. Pumping with more complicated light profiles results in the excitation of spatial modes in the blue that depend strongly on phase matching, thus demonstrating the parametric nature of the mode transfer. These results have implications on the inscription and storage of phase information in atomic gases.


Optics Express | 2006

Fourier relationship between angular position and optical orbital angular momentum

Eric Yao; Sonja Franke-Arnold; Johannes Courtial; Stephen M. Barnett; Miles J. Padgett

We demonstrate the Fourier relationship between angular position and angular momentum for a light mode. In particular we measure the distribution of orbital angular momentum states of light that has passed through an aperture and verify that the orbital angular momentum distribution is given by the complex Fourier-transform of the aperture function. We use spatial light modulators, configured as diffractive optical components, to define the initial orbital angular momentum state of the beam, set the defining aperture, and measure the angular momentum spread of the resulting beam. These measurements clearly confirm the Fourier relationship between angular momentum and angular position, even at light intensities corresponding to the single photon level.


Journal of Modern Optics | 2007

Quantum formulation of fractional orbital angular momentum

Jörg B. Götte; Sonja Franke-Arnold; Roberta Zambrini; Stephen M. Barnett

The quantum theory of rotation angles [S.M. Barnett and D.T. Pegg, Phys. Rev. A 41 3427 (1990)] is generalized to non-integer values of the orbital angular momentum. This requires the introduction of an additional parameter, the orientation of a phase discontinuity associated with fractional values of the orbital angular momentum. We apply our formalism to the propagation of light modes with fractional orbital angular momentum in the paraxial and non-paraxial regime.


Optics Express | 2010

Enhanced frequency up-conversion in Rb vapor

A. Vernier; Sonja Franke-Arnold; Erling Riis; Aidan S. Arnold

We demonstrate highly efficient generation of coherent 420 nm light via up-conversion of near-infrared lasers in a hot rubidium vapor cell. By optimizing pump polarizations and frequencies we achieve a single-pass conversion efficiency of 260% per Watt, significantly higher than in previous experiments. A full exploration of the coherent light generation and fluorescence as a function of both pump frequencies reveals that coherent blue light is generated close to (85)Rb two-photon resonances, as predicted by theory, but at high vapor pressure is suppressed in spectral regions that do not support phase matching or exhibit single-photon Kerr refraction. Favorable scaling of our current 1 mW blue beam power with additional pump power is predicted.

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Aidan S. Arnold

University of Strathclyde

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