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Quadratic squeezing: An overview
- Source :
- NASA. Goddard Space Flight Center, Workshop on Squeezed States and Uncertainty Relations.
- Publication Year :
- 1992
- Publisher :
- United States: NASA Center for Aerospace Information (CASI), 1992.
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Abstract
- The amplitude of the electric field of a mode of the electromagnetic field is not a fixed quantity: there are always quantum mechanical fluctuations. The amplitude, having both a magnitude and a phase, is a complex number and is described by the mode annihilation operator a. It is also possible to characterize the amplitude by its real and imaginary parts which correspond to the Hermitian and anti-Hermitian parts of a, X sub 1 = 1/2(a(sup +) + a) and X sub 2 = i/2(a(sup +) - a), respectively. These operators do not commute and, as a result, obey the uncertainty relation (h = 1) delta X sub 1(delta X sub 2) greater than or = 1/4. From this relation we see that the amplitude fluctuates within an 'error box' in the complex plane whose area is at least 1/4. Coherent states, among them the vacuum state, are minimum uncertainty states with delta X sub 1 = delta X sub 2 = 1/2. A squeezed state, squeezed in the X sub 1 direction, has the property that delta X sub 1 is less than 1/2. A squeezed state need not be a minimum uncertainty state, but those that are can be obtained by applying the squeeze operator.
- Subjects :
- Communications And Radar
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- NASA Technical Reports
- Journal :
- NASA. Goddard Space Flight Center, Workshop on Squeezed States and Uncertainty Relations
- Notes :
- NSF PHY-90-00173
- Publication Type :
- Report
- Accession number :
- edsnas.19920012816
- Document Type :
- Report