Abstract

With recent advances in nanophotonics, metasurfaces based on nano-resonators have facilitated novel types of optical devices. In particular, the interplay between different degrees of freedom, involving polarization and spatial modes, boosted classical polarization measurements and imaging applications. However, the use of metasurfaces for measuring the quantum states of light remains largely unexplored. Conventionally, the task of quantum state tomography is realized with several bulk optical elements, which need to be reconfigured multiple times. Such setups can suffer from decoherence, and there is a fundamental and practical interest in developing integrated solutions for measurement of multi-photon quantum states. We present a new concept and the first experimental realization of all-dielectric metasurfaces with no tuneable elements for imaging-based reconstruction of the full quantum state of entangled photons. Most prominently, we implement multi-photon interferometric measurements on a sub-wavelength thin optical element, which delivers ultimate miniaturization and extremely high robustness. Specifically, we realize a highly transparent all-dielectric metasurface, which spatially splits different components of quantum-polarization states. Then, a simple one-shot measurement of correlations with polarization-insensitive on-off click detectors enables complete reconstruction of multi-photon density matrices with high precision. In our experiment, we prepare sets of polarization states and reconstruct their density matrices with a high fidelity of over 99% for single photon states and above 95% for two-photon states. Our work provides a fundamental advance in the imaging of quantum states, where multi-photon quantum interference takes place at sub-wavelength scale.

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