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Quantum Photonics

  • Textbook
  • © 2017

Overview

  • Contains software for computer-based exercises
  • Supported by numerous numerical calculations that can be practised by the student
  • Gives guidance to determining precise properties and behaviour of photonic materials and devices through numerical modelling
  • Addresses a broad audience in physics, optoelectronics and material sciences

Part of the book series: Graduate Texts in Physics (GTP)

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Table of contents (9 chapters)

Keywords

About this book

This textbook employs a pedagogical approach that facilitates access to the fundamentals of Quantum Photonics. It contains an introductory description of the quantum properties of photons through the second quantization of the electromagnetic field, introducing stimulated and spontaneous emission of photons at the quantum level. Schrödinger’s equation is used to describe the behavior of electrons in a one-dimensional potential. Tunneling through a barrier is used to introduce the concept of non­locality of an electron at the quantum level, which is closely-related to quantum confinement tunneling, resonant tunneling, and the origin of energy bands in both periodic (crystalline) and aperiodic (non-crystalline) materials. Introducing the concepts of reciprocal space, Brillouin zones, and Bloch’s theorem, the determination of electronic band structure using the pseudopotential method is presented, allowing direct computation of the band structures of most group IV, group III-V, and group II-VI semiconductors.  The text is supported by numerous numerical calculations that can be repeated by the student. 

The book includes an extensive treatment of the time duration of tunneling. The non-local nature of quantum mechanical states is further developed by the proof of Bell’s theorem and an in-depth discussion of its implications for experimental phenomena like quantum tunneling and quantum entanglement. The entangled quantum photon pair is the workhorse for exploring the fundamental non-locality of quantum mechanics, as well as important applications such as quantum cryptography. Further, the book presents the generation of entangled photon pairs by spontaneous parametric downconversion in detail using operators of the quantized photonic field. 

The physics of laser action is presented using the quantum photonic basis of spontaneous and stimulated emission, highlighting the limits of Maxwell’s equations in describing quantum behavior. Further, the book shows how the quantum confinement of electrons leads to reduced threshold current on the macroscopic level. Quantum cascade and interband cascade laser structures are analyzed using methods developed in earlier chapters to show how band structure engineering can be applied to access photon emission energies that cannot be achieved using conventional materials.

Reviews

“The book is suitable as a textbook because of its pedagogical approach to the fundamentals of quantum photonics. Every chapter ends with a set of exercises and a reference list. This textbook is recommended for a graduate-level course on quantum photonics.” (Reva Gar, Optics & Photonics News, osa-opn.org, October, 2021)



“There is an in-depth treatment of quantum-mechanical tunneling together with MATLAB source code for calculations of sequential tunneling. … the book offers impressive breadth of topics, effortlessly compressed into fewer than 300 pages. There is no indication that this book has already been used for pedagogical purposes but, with the included exercises, it is eminently suited for such usage.” (K. Alan Shore, Optics & Photonics News, osa-opn.org, October, 2017)
“The book is surely interesting because it introduces many arguments that are usually only marginally explained or ignored altogether. … it may be recommended asa text of support for a course in quantum optics or photonics ... .” (Mario Bertolotti, Contemporary Physics, January 28, 2019)


Authors and Affiliations

  • Paris, France

    Thomas P. Pearsall

About the author

Thomas Pearsall has a distinguished career in photonic science and technology, where he has made major contributions to fibre-optic telecommunications and silicon photonics.

A graduate of Cornell University, he worked in research at Thomson/CSF, and at Bell Labs for nearly two decades. In 1990, Pearsall was named Boeing-Johnson Chair and Professor at the University of Washington.  From 1998 to 2002, he directed research on planar photonic crystals at Corning in Fontainebleau, France.

During his career, he has invented and developed the semiconductor materials and the lasers, LEDs and photodetectors that are ubiquitous in optical fiber telecommunication networks around the globe.  He has also designed and demonstrated key elements of silicon-based photonics, using strained-silicon and silicon-based photonic crystal materials.

In 2003, Pearsall started EPIC, The European Photonics Industry Consortium.  EPIC has been a leading contributor to the launch and the development of the European Technology Platform Photonics21.  

He is a Fellow of the American Physical Society and a Fellow of the IEEE.

 

Bibliographic Information

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