Hanbury-Brown And Twiss Effect
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In physics, the Hanbury Brown and Twiss (HBT) effect is any of a variety of
correlation In statistics, correlation or dependence is any statistical relationship, whether causal or not, between two random variables or bivariate data. Although in the broadest sense, "correlation" may indicate any type of association, in statistics ...
and anti-correlation effects in the intensities received by two detectors from a beam of particles. HBT effects can generally be attributed to the wave–particle duality of the beam, and the results of a given experiment depend on whether the beam is composed of
fermion In particle physics, a fermion is a particle that follows Fermi–Dirac statistics. Generally, it has a half-odd-integer spin: spin , spin , etc. In addition, these particles obey the Pauli exclusion principle. Fermions include all quarks an ...
s or bosons. Devices which use the effect are commonly called intensity interferometers and were originally used in astronomy, although they are also heavily used in the field of quantum optics.


History

In 1954, Robert Hanbury Brown and Richard Q. Twiss introduced the intensity interferometer concept to radio astronomy for measuring the tiny angular size of stars, suggesting that it might work with visible light as well. Soon after they successfully tested that suggestion: in 1956 they published an in-lab experimental mockup using blue light from a mercury-vapor lamp, and later in the same year, they applied this technique to measuring the size of Sirius. In the latter experiment, two
photomultiplier tube Photomultiplier tubes (photomultipliers or PMTs for short) are extremely sensitive detectors of light in the ultraviolet, visible, and near-infrared ranges of the electromagnetic spectrum. They are members of the class of vacuum tubes, more specif ...
s, separated by a few meters, were aimed at the star using crude telescopes, and a correlation was observed between the two fluctuating intensities. Just as in the radio studies, the correlation dropped away as they increased the separation (though over meters, instead of kilometers), and they used this information to determine the apparent angular size of Sirius. This result was met with much skepticism in the physics community. The radio astronomy result was justified by Maxwell's equations, but there were concerns that the effect should break down at optical wavelengths, since the light would be quantised into a relatively small number of photons that induce discrete photoelectrons in the detectors. Many physicists worried that the correlation was inconsistent with the laws of thermodynamics. Some even claimed that the effect violated the uncertainty principle. Hanbury Brown and Twiss resolved the dispute in a neat series of articles (see
References Reference is a relationship between objects in which one object designates, or acts as a means by which to connect to or link to, another object. The first object in this relation is said to ''refer to'' the second object. It is called a ''name'' ...
below) that demonstrated, first, that wave transmission in quantum optics had exactly the same mathematical form as Maxwell's equations, albeit with an additional noise term due to quantisation at the detector, and second, that according to Maxwell's equations, intensity interferometry should work. Others, such as
Edward Mills Purcell Edward Mills Purcell (August 30, 1912 – March 7, 1997) was an American physicist who shared the 1952 Nobel Prize for Physics for his independent discovery (published 1946) of nuclear magnetic resonance in liquids and in solids. Nuclear magne ...
immediately supported the technique, pointing out that the clumping of bosons was simply a manifestation of an effect already known in
statistical mechanics In physics, statistical mechanics is a mathematical framework that applies statistical methods and probability theory to large assemblies of microscopic entities. It does not assume or postulate any natural laws, but explains the macroscopic be ...
. After a number of experiments, the whole physics community agreed that the observed effect was real. The original experiment used the fact that two bosons tend to arrive at two separate detectors at the same time. Morgan and Mandel used a thermal photon source to create a dim beam of photons and observed the tendency of the photons to arrive at the same time on a single detector. Both of these effects used the wave nature of light to create a correlation in arrival time – if a single photon beam is split into two beams, then the particle nature of light requires that each photon is only observed at a single detector, and so an anti-correlation was observed in 1977 by H. Jeff Kimble. Finally, bosons have a tendency to clump together, giving rise to Bose–Einstein correlations, while fermions due to the Pauli exclusion principle, tend to spread apart, leading to Fermi–Dirac (anti)correlations. Bose–Einstein correlations have been observed between pions, kaons and photons, and Fermi–Dirac (anti)correlations between protons, neutrons and electrons. For a general introduction in this field, see the textbook on Bose–Einstein correlations by
Richard M. Weiner Richard M. Weiner (6 February 1930 – 13 August 2020) was a professor of theoretical physics at the University of Marburg in Marburg, Germany and an associate of the Laboratoire de Physique Théorique at Paris-Sud 11 University in Orsay, Franc ...
A difference in repulsion of Bose–Einstein condensate in the "trap-and-free fall" analogy of the HBT effect affects comparison. Also, in the field of particle physics, Goldhaber et al. performed an experiment in 1959 in Berkeley and found an unexpected angular correlation among identical pions, discovering the ρ0 resonance, by means of \rho^0 \to \pi^-\pi^+ decay. From then on, the HBT technique started to be used by the heavy-ion community to determine the space–time dimensions of the particle emission source for heavy-ion collisions. For recent developments in this field, see for example the review article by Lisa.M. Lisa, et al., ''Annu. Rev. Nucl. Part. Sci.'' 55, p. 357 (2005)
ArXiv 0505014


Wave mechanics

The HBT effect can, in fact, be predicted solely by treating the incident electromagnetic radiation as a classical wave. Suppose we have a monochromatic wave with frequency \omega on two detectors, with an amplitude E(t) that varies on timescales slower than the wave period 2\pi/\omega. (Such a wave might be produced from a very distant point source with a fluctuating intensity.) Since the detectors are separated, say the second detector gets the signal delayed by a time \tau, or equivalently, a phase \phi = \omega\tau; that is, : E_1(t) = E(t) \sin(\omega t), : E_2(t) = E(t - \tau) \sin(\omega t - \phi). The intensity recorded by each detector is the square of the wave amplitude, averaged over a timescale that is long compared to the wave period 2\pi/\omega but short compared to the fluctuations in E(t): : \begin i_1(t) &= \overline = \overline = \tfrac E(t)^2, \\ i_2(t) &= \overline = \overline = \tfrac E(t - \tau)^2, \end where the overline indicates this time averaging. For wave frequencies above a few
terahertz Terahertz or THz may refer to: * Terahertz (unit), a unit of frequency, defined as one trillion (1012) cycles per second or 1012 hertz * Terahertz radiation, electromagnetic waves within the ITU-designated band of frequencies from 0.3 to 3 terahe ...
(wave periods less than a
picosecond A picosecond (abbreviated as ps) is a unit of time in the International System of Units (SI) equal to 10−12 or (one trillionth) of a second. That is one trillionth, or one millionth of one millionth of a second, or 0.000 000 000  ...
), such a time averaging is unavoidable, since detectors such as
photodiode A photodiode is a light-sensitive semiconductor diode. It produces current when it absorbs photons. The package of a photodiode allows light (or infrared or ultraviolet radiation, or X-rays) to reach the sensitive part of the device. The packag ...
s and
photomultiplier tube Photomultiplier tubes (photomultipliers or PMTs for short) are extremely sensitive detectors of light in the ultraviolet, visible, and near-infrared ranges of the electromagnetic spectrum. They are members of the class of vacuum tubes, more specif ...
s cannot produce photocurrents that vary on such short timescales. The correlation function \langle i_1 i_2 \rangle(\tau) of these time-averaged intensities can then be computed: : \begin \langle i_1 i_2 \rangle(\tau) &= \lim_ \frac \int\limits_0^T i_1(t) i_2(t)\, \mathrmt \\ &= \lim_ \frac \int\limits_0^T \tfrac E(t)^2 E(t-\tau)^2 \, \mathrmt. \end Most modern schemes actually measure the correlation in intensity fluctuations at the two detectors, but it is not too difficult to see that if the intensities are correlated, then the fluctuations \Delta i = i - \langle i\rangle, where \langle i\rangle is the average intensity, ought to be correlated, since :\begin \langle\Delta i_1\Delta i_2\rangle &= \big\langle(i_1 - \langle i_1\rangle)(i_2 - \langle i_2\rangle)\big\rangle = \langle i_1 i_2\rangle - \big\langle i_1\langle i_2\rangle\big\rangle - \big\langle i_2\langle i_1\rangle\big\rangle + \langle i_1\rangle \langle i_2\rangle \\ &=\langle i_1 i_2\rangle -\langle i_1\rangle \langle i_2\rangle. \end In the particular case that E(t) consists mainly of a steady field E_0 with a small sinusoidally varying component \delta E \sin(\Omega t), the time-averaged intensities are : \begin i_1(t) &= \tfrac E_0^2 + E_0\,\delta E \sin(\Omega t) + \mathcal(\delta E^2), \\ i_2(t) &= \tfrac E_0^2 + E_0\,\delta E \sin(\Omega t-\Phi) + \mathcal(\delta E^2), \end with \Phi = \Omega \tau, and \mathcal(\delta E^2) indicates terms proportional to (\delta E)^2, which are small and may be ignored. The correlation function of these two intensities is then : \begin \langle \Delta i_1 \Delta i_2 \rangle(\tau) &= \lim_ \frac \int\limits_0^T \sin(\Omega t) \sin(\Omega t - \Phi) \, \mathrmt \\ &= \tfrac (E_0 \delta E)^2 \cos(\Omega\tau), \end showing a sinusoidal dependence on the delay \tau between the two detectors.


Quantum interpretation

The above discussion makes it clear that the Hanbury Brown and Twiss (or photon bunching) effect can be entirely described by classical optics. The quantum description of the effect is less intuitive: if one supposes that a thermal or chaotic light source such as a star randomly emits photons, then it is not obvious how the photons "know" that they should arrive at a detector in a correlated (bunched) way. A simple argument suggested by Ugo Fano ano, 1961captures the essence of the quantum explanation. Consider two points a and b in a source that emit photons detected by two detectors A and B as in the diagram. A joint detection takes place when the photon emitted by a is detected by A and the photon emitted by b is detected by B (red arrows) ''or'' when a's photon is detected by B and b's by A (green arrows). The quantum mechanical probability amplitudes for these two possibilities are denoted by \langle A, a \rangle \langle B, b \rangle and \langle B, a \rangle \langle A, b \rangle respectively. If the photons are indistinguishable, the two amplitudes interfere constructively to give a joint detection probability greater than that for two independent events. The sum over all possible pairs a, b in the source washes out the interference unless the distance AB is sufficiently small. Fano's explanation nicely illustrates the necessity of considering two-particle amplitudes, which are not as intuitive as the more familiar single-particle amplitudes used to interpret most interference effects. This may help to explain why some physicists in the 1950s had difficulty accepting the Hanbury Brown and Twiss result. But the quantum approach is more than just a fancy way to reproduce the classical result: if the photons are replaced by identical fermions such as electrons, the antisymmetry of wave functions under exchange of particles renders the interference destructive, leading to zero joint detection probability for small detector separations. This effect is referred to as antibunching of fermions enny, 1999 The above treatment also explains photon antibunching imble, 1977 if the source consists of a single atom, which can only emit one photon at a time, simultaneous detection in two closely spaced detectors is clearly impossible. Antibunching, whether of bosons or of fermions, has no classical wave analog. From the point of view of the field of quantum optics, the HBT effect was important to lead physicists (among them Roy J. Glauber and Leonard Mandel) to apply quantum electrodynamics to new situations, many of which had never been experimentally studied, and in which classical and quantum predictions differ.


See also

* Bose–Einstein correlations *
Degree of coherence In quantum optics, correlation functions are used to characterize the statistical and coherence properties of an electromagnetic field. The degree of coherence is the normalized correlation of electric fields; in its simplest form, termed g^. ...
* Timeline of electromagnetism and classical optics


References

Note that Hanbury Brown is not hyphenated. * – paper which (incorrectly) disputed the existence of the Hanbury Brown and Twiss effect * – experimental demonstration of the effect * *
download as PDF
*
download as PDF
* * * * – the cavity-QED equivalent for Kimble & Mandel's free-space demonstration of photon antibunching in resonance fluorescence * * * * * * {{cite journal , author1=Y. Bromberg , author2=Y. Lahini , author3=E. Small , author4=Y. Silberberg , title=Hanbury Brown and Twiss Interferometry with Interacting Photons , journal=Nature Photonics, year=2010 , volume=4 , pages=721–726 , doi=10.1038/nphoton.2010.195 , issue=10, bibcode = 2010NaPho...4..721B


External links

* http://adsabs.harvard.edu//full/seri/JApA./0015//0000015.000.html * http://physicsweb.org/articles/world/15/10/6/1 * https://web.archive.org/web/20070609114114/http://www.du.edu/~jcalvert/astro/starsiz.htm * http://www.2physics.com/2010/11/hanbury-brown-and-twiss-interferometry.html
Hanbury-Brown-Twiss Experiment
(Becker & Hickl GmbH, web page) Quantum optics