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Dive into the research topics where Vincenzo D'Ambrosio is active.

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Featured researches published by Vincenzo D'Ambrosio.


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.


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.


Nature Communications | 2015

Storage and retrieval of vector beams of light in a multiple-degree-of-freedom quantum memory

Valentina Parigi; Vincenzo D'Ambrosio; Christophe Arnold; Lorenzo Marrucci; Fabio Sciarrino; Julien Laurat

The full structuration of light in the transverse plane, including intensity, phase and polarization, holds the promise of unprecedented capabilities for applications in classical optics as well as in quantum optics and information sciences. Harnessing special topologies can lead to enhanced focusing, data multiplexing or advanced sensing and metrology. Here we experimentally demonstrate the storage of such spatio-polarization-patterned beams into an optical memory. A set of vectorial vortex modes is generated via liquid crystal cell with topological charge in the optic axis distribution, and preservation of the phase and polarization singularities is demonstrated after retrieval, at the single-photon level. The realized multiple-degree-of-freedom memory can find applications in classical data processing but also in quantum network scenarios where structured states have been shown to provide promising attributes, such as rotational invariance.


Optics Express | 2010

The Polarizing Sagnac Interferometer: a tool for light orbital angular momentum sorting and spin-orbit photon processing

Sergei Slussarenko; Vincenzo D'Ambrosio; Bruno Piccirillo; Lorenzo Marrucci; Enrico Santamato

In this paper we show that an optical setup based on a polarizing Sagnac interferometer combined with a Dove prism can be used as a convenient general-purpose tool for the generation, detection and sorting of spin-orbit states of light. This device can work both in the classical and in the quantum single-photon regime, provides higher sorting efficiency and extinction ratio than usual hologram-fiber combinations, and shows much higher stability and ease of alignment than Mach-Zehnder interferometer setups. To demonstrate the full potential of this setup, we also report some demonstrative experiments of several possible applications of this setup.


Physical Review X | 2013

Experimental Implementation of a Kochen-Specker Set of Quantum Tests

Vincenzo D'Ambrosio; Isabelle Herbauts; Elias Amselem; Eleonora Nagali; Mohamed Bourennane; Fabio Sciarrino; Adan Cabello

The conflict between classical and quantum physics can be identified through a series of yes-no tests on quantum systems, without it being necessary that these systems be in special quantum states. ...


Physical Review Letters | 2014

Experimental entanglement activation from discord in a programmable quantum measurement

Gerardo Adesso; Vincenzo D'Ambrosio; Eleonora Nagali; Marco Piani; Fabio Sciarrino

In quantum mechanics, observing is not a passive act. Consider a system of two quantum particles A and B: if a measurement apparatus M is used to make an observation on B, the overall state of the system AB will typically be altered. When this happens, no matter which local measurement is performed, the two objects A and B are revealed to possess peculiar correlations known as quantum discord. Here, we demonstrate experimentally that the very act of local observation gives rise to an activation protocol which converts discord into distillable entanglement, a stronger and more useful form of quantum correlations, between the apparatus M and the composite system AB. We adopt a flexible two-photon setup to realize a three-qubit system (A, B, M) with programmable degrees of initial correlations, measurement interaction, and characterization processes. Our experiment demonstrates the fundamental mechanism underpinning the ubiquitous act of observing the quantum world and establishes the potential of discord in entanglement generation.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Arbitrary, direct and deterministic manipulation of vector beams via electrically-tuned q-plates

Vincenzo D'Ambrosio; Flavio Baccari; Sergei Slussarenko; Lorenzo Marrucci; Fabio Sciarrino

Vectorial vortex light beams, also referred to as spirally polarized beams, are of particular interest since they can be exploited in several applications ranging from quantum communication to spectroscopy and microscopy. In particular, symmetric pairs of vector beams define two-dimensional spaces which are described as “hybrid Poincaré spheres” (HPS). While generation of vortex beams has been demonstrated by various techniques, their manipulation, in particular in order to obtain transformations describing curves entirely contained on a given HPS, is quite challenging, as it requires a simultaneous action on both polarization and orbital angular momentum degrees of freedom. Here, we demonstrate experimentally this kind of manipulation by exploiting electrically-tuned q-plates: an arbitrary transformation on the HPS can be obtained, by controlling two parameters of the q-plate, namely the initial optic axis orientation α0 and the uniform birefringent phase retardation δ. Upon varying such parameters, one can determine both the rotation axis and the rotation angle on the HPS, obtaining the desired state manipulation with high fidelity.


Scientific Reports | 2013

Test of mutually unbiased bases for six-dimensional photonic quantum systems

Vincenzo D'Ambrosio; Filippo Cardano; Ebrahim Karimi; Eleonora Nagali; Enrico Santamato; Lorenzo Marrucci; Fabio Sciarrino

In quantum information, complementarity of quantum mechanical observables plays a key role. The eigenstates of two complementary observables form a pair of mutually unbiased bases (MUBs). More generally, a set of MUBs consists of bases that are all pairwise unbiased. Except for specific dimensions of the Hilbert space, the maximal sets of MUBs are unknown in general. Even for a dimension as low as six, the identification of a maximal set of MUBs remains an open problem, although there is strong numerical evidence that no more than three simultaneous MUBs do exist. Here, by exploiting a newly developed holographic technique, we implement and test different sets of three MUBs for a single photon six-dimensional quantum state (a “qusix”), encoded exploiting polarization and orbital angular momentum of photons. A close agreement is observed between theory and experiments. Our results can find applications in state tomography, quantitative wave-particle duality, quantum key distribution.


Light-Science & Applications | 2015

Thermally reconfigurable quantum photonic circuits at telecom wavelength by femtosecond laser micromachining

Fulvio Flamini; Lorenzo Magrini; Adil S. Rab; Nicolò Spagnolo; Vincenzo D'Ambrosio; Paolo Mataloni; Fabio Sciarrino; Tommaso Zandrini; Andrea Crespi; Roberta Ramponi; Roberto Osellame

The importance of integrated quantum photonics in the telecom band resides on the possibility of interfacing with the optical network infrastructure developed for classical communications. In this framework, femtosecond laser written integrated photonic circuits, already assessed for quantum information experiments in the 800 nm wavelength range, have great potentials. In fact these circuits, written in glass, can be perfectly mode-matched at telecom wavelength to the in/out coupling fibers, which is a key requirement for a low-loss processing node in future quantum optical networks. In addition, for several applications quantum photonic devices will also need to be dynamically reconfigurable. Here we experimentally demonstrate the high performance of femtosecond laser written photonic circuits for quantum experiments in the telecom band and we show the use of thermal shifters, also fabricated by the same femtosecond laser, to accurately tune them. State-of-the-art manipulation of single and two-photon states is demonstrated, with fringe visibilities greater than 95%. This opens the way to the realization of reconfigurable quantum photonic circuits on this technological platform.


Physical Review A | 2011

Hybrid ququart-encoded quantum cryptography protected by Kochen-Specker contextuality

Adan Cabello; Vincenzo D'Ambrosio; Eleonora Nagali; Fabio Sciarrino

Quantum cryptographic protocols based on complementarity are not secure against attacks in which complementarity is imitated with classical resources. The Kochen-Specker (KS) theorem provides protection against these attacks, without requiring entanglement or spatially separated composite systems. We analyze the maximum tolerated noise to guarantee the security of a KS-protected cryptographic scheme against these attacks and describe a photonic realization of this scheme using hybrid ququarts defined by the polarization and orbital angular momentum of single photons.

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Fabio Sciarrino

Sapienza University of Rome

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Lorenzo Marrucci

University of Naples Federico II

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Eleonora Nagali

Sapienza University of Rome

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Lorenzo Marrucci

University of Naples Federico II

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S. P. Walborn

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Leandro Aolita

Free University of Berlin

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