Abstract
When a laser beam interacts with a nonlinear crystal, some of the incident photons fission into two lower frequency signal and idler photons through the process of spontaneous parametric downconversion. It is shown that, as a result of the strong positive correlation between signal and idler photons, the normalized intensity cross-correlation function λ12(τ) should be inversely proportional to the downconverted light intensity and ideally should be given by the inverse of the mean number of photons counted in the resolving time. This unusual relationship, which is a reflection of the quantum mechanical character of the downconverted optical field, has been confirmed in photoelectric counting measurements. The experiment makes use of the light from an argon-ion laser oscillating at 351.1 nm interacting with an 8-cm long crystal of KDP. The downconverted light is extracted at 633.5 and 788.0 nm in two directions that satisfy the phase-matching condition and is allowed to fall on two counting photomultipliers. The output pulses are fed to a time-to-digital converter that yields the cross-correlation function.
© 1985 Optical Society of America
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