Thomas Gerrits
National Institute of Standards and Technology
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Publication
Featured researches published by Thomas Gerrits.
Nature Photonics | 2013
Francesco Marsili; Varun B. Verma; Jeffrey A. Stern; S. Harrington; Adriana E. Lita; Thomas Gerrits; I. Vayshenker; Burm Baek; Matthew D. Shaw; Richard P. Mirin; Sae Woo Nam
Researchers develop a fiber-coupled single-photon-detection system using amorphous tungsten silicide superconducting nanowire single-photon detectors. The system detection efficiency is higher than 90% in the wavelength range between 1520 nm and 1610 nm. The device dark-count rate, timing jitter and reset time are 1 cps, 150 ps and 40 ns, respectively.
Physical Review Letters | 2015
Lynden K. Shalm; Evan Meyer-Scott; Bradley G. Christensen; Peter Bierhorst; Michael A. Wayne; Martin J. Stevens; Thomas Gerrits; Scott C. Glancy; Deny R. Hamel; Michael S. Allman; Kevin J. Coakley; Shellee D. Dyer; Carson Hodge; Adriana E. Lita; Varun B. Verma; Camilla Lambrocco; Edward Tortorici; Alan L. Migdall; Yanbao Zhang; Daniel Kumor; William H. Farr; Francesco Marsili; Matthew D. Shaw; Jeffrey A. Stern; Carlos Abellan; Waldimar Amaya; Valerio Pruneri; Thomas Jennewein; Morgan W. Mitchell; Paul G. Kwiat
We performed an loophole-free test of Bells inequalities. The probability that local realism is compatible with our results is less than 5.9×10<sup>-9</sup>.
Physical Review Letters | 2015
Marissa Giustina; Marijn A. M. Versteegh; Soeren Wengerowsky; Johannes Handsteiner; Armin Hochrainer; Kevin Phelan; Fabian Steinlechner; Johannes Kofler; Jan-Åke Larsson; Carlos Abellan; Waldimar Amaya; Valerio Pruneri; Morgan W. Mitchell; Joern Beyer; Thomas Gerrits; Adriana E. Lita; Lynden K. Shalm; Sae Woo Nam; Thomas Scheidl; Rupert Ursin; Bernhard Wittmann; Anton Zeilinger
Local realism is the worldview in which physical properties of objects exist independently of measurement and where physical influences cannot travel faster than the speed of light. Bells theorem states that this worldview is incompatible with the predictions of quantum mechanics, as is expressed in Bells inequalities. Previous experiments convincingly supported the quantum predictions. Yet, every experiment requires assumptions that provide loopholes for a local realist explanation. Here, we report a Bell test that closes the most significant of these loopholes simultaneously. Using a well-optimized source of entangled photons, rapid setting generation, and highly efficient superconducting detectors, we observe a violation of a Bell inequality with high statistical significance. The purely statistical probability of our results to occur under local realism does not exceed 3.74×10^{-31}, corresponding to an 11.5 standard deviation effect.
Nature | 2013
Marissa Giustina; Alexandra Mech; Sven Ramelow; Bernhard Wittmann; Johannes Kofler; J. Beyer; Adriana E. Lita; Brice Calkins; Thomas Gerrits; Sae Woo Nam; Rupert Ursin; Anton Zeilinger
The violation of a Bell inequality is an experimental observation that forces the abandonment of a local realistic viewpoint—namely, one in which physical properties are (probabilistically) defined before and independently of measurement, and in which no physical influence can propagate faster than the speed of light. All such experimental violations require additional assumptions depending on their specific construction, making them vulnerable to so-called loopholes. Here we use entangled photons to violate a Bell inequality while closing the fair-sampling loophole, that is, without assuming that the sample of measured photons accurately represents the entire ensemble. To do this, we use the Eberhard form of Bell’s inequality, which is not vulnerable to the fair-sampling assumption and which allows a lower collection efficiency than other forms. Technical improvements of the photon source and high-efficiency transition-edge sensors were crucial for achieving a sufficiently high collection efficiency. Our experiment makes the photon the first physical system for which each of the main loopholes has been closed, albeit in different experiments.
Physical Review A | 2010
Thomas Gerrits; Scott Glancy; Tracy S. Clement; Brice Calkins; Adriana E. Lita; Aaron J. Miller; Alan L. Migdall; Sae Woo Nam; Richard P. Mirin; Emanuel Knill
We have created heralded coherent-state superpositions (CSSs) by subtracting up to three photons from a pulse of squeezed vacuum light. To produce such CSSs at a sufficient rate, we used our high-efficiency photon-number-resolving transition edge sensor to detect the subtracted photons. This experiment is enabled by and utilizes the full photon-number-resolving capabilities of this detector. The CSS produced by three-photon subtraction had a mean-photon number of 2.75{sub -0.24}{sup +0.06} and a fidelity of 0.59{sub -0.14}{sup +0.04} with an ideal CSS. This confirms that subtracting more photons results in higher-amplitude CSSs.
Optics Express | 2011
Thomas Gerrits; Martin J. Stevens; Burm Baek; Brice Calkins; Adriana E. Lita; Scott C. Glancy; Emanuel Knill; Sae Woo Nam; Richard P. Mirin; Robert H. Hadfield; Ryan S. Bennink; Warren P. Grice; Sander N. Dorenbos; T. Zijlstra; Teun M. Klapwijk; Val Zwiller
We characterize a periodically poled KTP crystal that produces an entangled, two-mode, squeezed state with orthogonal polarizations, nearly identical, factorizable frequency modes, and few photons in unwanted frequency modes. We focus the pump beam to create a nearly circular joint spectral probability distribution between the two modes. After disentangling the two modes, we observe Hong-Ou-Mandel interference with a raw (background corrected) visibility of 86% (95%) when an 8.6 nm bandwidth spectral filter is applied. We measure second order photon correlations of the entangled and disentangled squeezed states with both superconducting nanowire single-photon detectors and photon-number-resolving transition-edge sensors. Both methods agree and verify that the detected modes contain the desired photon number distributions.
Optics Express | 2013
Brice Calkins; Paolo L. Mennea; Adriana E. Lita; Benjamin J. Metcalf; W. Steven Kolthammer; Antia Lamas-Linares; Justin B. Spring; Peter C. Humphreys; Richard P. Mirin; James C. Gates; P.G.R. Smith; Ian A. Walmsley; Thomas Gerrits; Sae Woo Nam
We demonstrate a high-efficiency, photon-number resolving transition edge sensor, integrated on an optical silica waveguide structure. The detector consists of three individual absorber/sensor devices providing a total system detection efficiency of up to 93% for single photons at a wavelength of 1551.9 nm. This new design enables high fidelity detection of quantum information processes in on-chip platforms.
Applied Physics Letters | 2015
Michael S. Allman; Varun B. Verma; Martin J. Stevens; Thomas Gerrits; Robert D. Horansky; Adriana E. Lita; Francesco Marsili; Andrew D. Beyer; Matthew D. Shaw; D. Kumor; Richard P. Mirin; Sae Woo Nam
We demonstrate a 64-pixel free-space-coupled array of superconducting nanowire single photon detectors optimized for high detection efficiency in the near-infrared range. An integrated, readily scalable, multiplexed readout scheme is employed to reduce the number of readout lines to 16. The cryogenic, optical, and electronic packaging to read out the array, as well as characterization measurements are discussed.
Journal of Applied Physics | 2006
Thomas Gerrits; Michael L. Schneider; Thomas J. Silva
We have investigated the enhancement of ferromagnetic damping for thin Permalloy (Ni80Fe20) films grown with Cu capping layers of variable thickness (5–1000 nm). The measurements were performed with a pulsed inductive microwave magnetometer in the frequency range between 2.3 and 2.7 GHz. The damping was enhanced if the Cu layers were thicker than the spin-diffusion length of ls≈250nm. For example, the damping was enhanced by 30% for a Permalloy (3nm)∕Cu (1000 nm) bilayer relative to the damping for Permalloy with a 5-nm-thick Cu capping layer. Existing theory for spin pumping from the Permalloy layer into the Cu layer was used to model the additional contribution to damping for these bilayer systems. Additional experiments on Permalloy (5nm)∕Cu(xnm)∕Ta (5 nm) provided indirect evidence for spin accumulation inside the Cu layer.
Physical Review B | 2006
Thomas Gerrits; Michael L. Schneider; Anthony B. Kos; Thomas J. Silva
A time-resolved ferromagnetic resonance technique was used to investigate the nonlinear magnetization dynamics of a