Abstract
The usual formulations of the quantum and semiclassical theories of photodetection presume open-loop configurations, i.e., that there are no feedback paths leading from the output of the photodetector to the light beam impinging on that detector. In such configurations, the qualitative and quantitative distinctions between the quantum and semiclassical theories are well understood. In the quantum theory, photocurrent and photocount randomness arises from the quantum noise in the illumination beam, whereas in the semiclassical theory the fundamental source of randomness is associated with the excitations of the atoms forming the detector. Nevertheless, the quantum theory subsumes the semiclassical theory in a natural way.1
© 1986 Optical Society of America
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