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Dive into the research topics where Takayuki Numata is active.

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Featured researches published by Takayuki Numata.


Optics Express | 2011

Titanium-based transition-edge photon number resolving detector with 98% detection efficiency with index-matched small-gap fiber coupling

Daiji Fukuda; Go Fujii; Takayuki Numata; Kuniaki Amemiya; Akio Yoshizawa; Hidemi Tsuchida; Hidetoshi Fujino; Hiroyuki Ishii; Taro Itatani; Shuichiro Inoue; Tatsuya Zama

We have realized a high-detection-efficiency photon number resolving detector at an operating wavelength of about 850 nm. The detector consists of a titanium superconducting transition edge sensor in an optical cavity, which is directly coupled to an optical fiber using an approximately 300-nm gap. The gap reduces the sensitive area and heat capacity of the device, leading to high photon number resolution of 0.42 eV without sacrificing detection efficiency or signal response speed. Wavelength dependent efficiency in fiber-coupled devices, which is due to optical interference between the fiber and the device, is also decreased to less than 1% in this configuration. The overall system detection efficiency is 98%±1% at wavelengths of around 850 nm, which is the highest value ever reported in this wavelength range.


Metrologia | 2009

Photon number resolving detection with high speed and high quantum efficiency

Daiji Fukuda; Go Fujii; Takayuki Numata; Akio Yoshizawa; Hidemi Tsuchida; Hidetoshi Fujino; Hiroyuki Ishii; Taro Itatani; Shuichiro Inoue; Tatsuya Zama

Photon number resolving detectors based on titanium-transition edge sensors with high speed and high quantum efficiency have been developed for quantum sensors in the fields of quantum information and quantum radiometry. The two devices optimized at wavelengths of interest showed 81% and 64% system detection efficiencies at 850 nm and 1550 nm, respectively. The response speed of the device optimized for a high counting operation is 190 ns, which corresponds to a counting rate over 1 MHz.


IEEE Transactions on Applied Superconductivity | 2011

Titanium Superconducting Photon-Number-Resolving Detector

Daiji Fukuda; Go Fujii; Takayuki Numata; Kuniaki Amemiya; Akio Yoshizawa; Hidemi Tsuchida; Hidetoshi Fujino; Hiroyuki Ishii; Taro Itatani; Shuichiro Inoue; Tatsuya Zama

High-efficiency photon-number-resolving detectors have been developed using titanium-based transition-edge sensors. Device performances have been evaluated with respect to the response photon distribution, dark count, and timing jitter. In the analysis of the photon statistics, the observed detection probabilities were consistent with Poisson distributions. From a comparison of the measured distribution with theory, 98% detection efficiency was deduced at 850 nm. The dark count probability of the device is less than 10-6, corresponding to a dark count rate of 0.6 Hz. The timing jitter is 25 ns, the best value ever reported (to our knowledge) in transition-edge sensors used for optical photon measurements.


Physical Review A | 2016

Experimental quantum data locking

Yang Liu; Zhu Cao; Cheng Wu; Daiji Fukuda; Lixing You; Jiaqiang Zhong; Takayuki Numata; S. J. Chen; Weijun Zhang; Sheng-Cai Shi; Chao-Yang Lu; Zhen Wang; Xiongfeng Ma; Jingyun Fan; Qiang Zhang; Jian-Wei Pan

Classical correlation can be locked via quantum means: quantum data locking. With a short secret key, one can lock an exponentially large amount of information in order to make it inaccessible to unauthorized users without the key. Quantum data locking presents a resource-efficient alternative to one-time pad encryption which requires a key no shorter than the message. We report experimental demonstrations of a quantum data locking scheme originally proposed by D. P. DiVincenzo et al. [Phys. Rev. Lett. 92, 067902 (2004)] and a loss-tolerant scheme developed by O. Fawzi et al. [J. ACM 60, 44 (2013)]. We observe that the unlocked amount of information is larger than the key size in both experiments, exhibiting strong violation of the incremental proportionality property of classical information theory. As an application example, we show the successful transmission of a photo over a lossy channel with quantum data (un)locking and error correction.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Ultrabroadband direct detection of nonclassical photon statistics at telecom wavelength

Kentaro Wakui; Yujiro Eto; Hugo Benichi; Shuro Izumi; Tetsufumi Yanagida; Kazuhiro Ema; Takayuki Numata; Daiji Fukuda; Masahiro Takeoka; Masahide Sasaki

Broadband light sources play essential roles in diverse fields, such as high-capacity optical communications, optical coherence tomography, optical spectroscopy, and spectrograph calibration. Although a nonclassical state from spontaneous parametric down-conversion may serve as a quantum counterpart, its detection and characterization have been a challenging task. Here we demonstrate the direct detection of photon numbers of an ultrabroadband (110 nm FWHM) squeezed state in the telecom band centred at 1535 nm wavelength, using a superconducting transition-edge sensor. The observed photon-number distributions violate Klyshkos criterion for the nonclassicality. From the observed photon-number distribution, we evaluate the second- and third-order correlation functions, and characterize a multimode structure, which implies that several tens of orthonormal modes of squeezing exist in the single optical pulse. Our results and techniques open up a new possibility to generate and characterize frequency-multiplexed nonclassical light sources for quantum info-communications technology.


Applied Optics | 2012

Comprehensive characterization of broadband ultralow reflectance of a porous nickel–phosphorus black surface by numerical simulation

Kuniaki Amemiya; Daiji Fukuda; Takayuki Numata; Minoru Tanabe; Yoshiro Ichino

Porous nickel-phosphorus (NiP) black surfaces exhibit excellent low reflectance in the visible and near-IR regions. Through use of a model of the surface morphology and composition, the reflectance was numerically simulated by a three-dimensional finite-difference time-domain method to determine the origin of the low reflectance. In agreement with experimental results, the simulations showed a spectrally flat, quite low reflectance of <0.1% over the entire visible-near-IR region under certain conditions. The reflectance depended strongly on the thickness of the black nickel oxide layer and the aspect ratio of the three-dimensional surface morphology. A method of validating the reflectance of porous NiP black surfaces is suggested.


Proceedings of SPIE, the International Society for Optical Engineering | 2009

Titanium TES based photon number resolving detectors with 1 MHz counting rate and 65% quantum efficiency

Daiji Fukuda; Go Fujii; Takayuki Numata; Akio Yoshizawa; Hidemi Tsuchida; Shuichiro Inoue; Tatsuya Zama

A transition edge sensor (TES) is one of superconducting photon detectors, which has a photon number resolving ability in light pulses. The TES device is a kind of calorimeters operated at an extremely low temperature, and the energy of the photons is measured as a resistance change in a superconducting transition region of the TES. The advantages of the TESs are an excellent energy resolution and a high quantum efficiency. However a response speed is limited due to slow thermal recovery time. To overcome this, we fabricated new TES devices which are based on a titanium superconductor. The critical temperature of our titanium films is around 410 mK, which greatly improves the thermal recovery time. The observed decay time constant of response signals to the light pulses is around several hundreds of ns, that make it possible to operate the devices at a counting rate over 1 MHz. The photon number resolving power is 0.35 eV(FWHM) for a 5 μm size device even at the high operating temperature. The system quantum efficiency is 65 % by embedding the TES films in an optical structure with a high reflection dielectric mirror and an anti-reflection coatings fabricated by an ion beam assisted sputtering method. These features are very promising for high speed photon number resolving applications in the quantum information field.


Applied Optics | 2015

Spectral supralinearity prediction of silicon photodiodes in the near-infrared range.

Minoru Tanabe; Kuniaki Amemiya; Takayuki Numata; Daiji Fukuda

A model describing spectral supralinearity for a silicon photodiode in the near-infrared region is presented. This theoretical model is based on the internal quantum efficiency model of the photodiode using Shockley-Read-Hall recombination, which depends on the inner structure parameters of the photodiodes. Comparing the experimental results with the theoretical calculation results, the model enables us to quantitatively predict the starting power level, shape, and wavelength dependence of the supralinearity for a silicon photodiode. This model contributes to high-accuracy measurements over wide optical power ranges and various incident wavelengths.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Few-photon color imaging using energy-dispersive superconducting transition-edge sensor spectrometry

Kazuki Niwa; Takayuki Numata; Kaori Hattori; Daiji Fukuda

Highly sensitive spectral imaging is increasingly being demanded in bioanalysis research and industry to obtain the maximum information possible from molecules of different colors. We introduce an application of the superconducting transition-edge sensor (TES) technique to highly sensitive spectral imaging. A TES is an energy-dispersive photodetector that can distinguish the wavelength of each incident photon. Its effective spectral range is from the visible to the infrared (IR), up to 2800 nm, which is beyond the capabilities of other photodetectors. TES was employed in this study in a fiber-coupled optical scanning microscopy system, and a test sample of a three-color ink pattern was observed. A red–green–blue (RGB) image and a near-IR image were successfully obtained in the few-incident-photon regime, whereas only a black and white image could be obtained using a photomultiplier tube. Spectral data were also obtained from a selected focal area out of the entire image. The results of this study show that TES is feasible for use as an energy-dispersive photon-counting detector in spectral imaging applications.


Applied Optics | 2016

Spectral supralinearity of silicon photodiodes in visible light due to surface recombination

Minoru Tanabe; Kuniaki Amemiya; Takayuki Numata; Daiji Fukuda

Spectral supralinearity of silicon photodiodes in visible light was investigated. The experimental spectral supralinearity results were compared with the calculation results using a device simulator, PC1D that includes the front surface recombination parameters, and these comparison results were in reasonable agreement for a silicon photodiode. These comparison results show that supralinearity in visible light clearly occurs with a front surface charge density of more than 1012  cm-2 and the included parameters are adequate for quantitatively predicting the internal quantum efficiency of silicon photodiodes.

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Daiji Fukuda

National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology

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Minoru Tanabe

National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology

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Akio Yoshizawa

National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology

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Go Fujii

National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology

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Hidemi Tsuchida

National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology

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Tatsuya Zama

National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology

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Kaori Hattori

National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology

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Kazuki Niwa

National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology

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