Abstract

Interferometry is one of the central organizing principles of optics. Key to interferometry is the concept of optical delay, which facilitates spectral analysis in terms of time-harmonics. In contrast, when analyzing a beam in a Hilbert space spanned by spatial modes – a critical task for spatial-mode multiplexing and quantum communication – basis-specific principles are invoked that are altogether distinct from that of ‘delay’. Here, we extend the traditional concept of temporal delay to the spatial domain, thereby enabling the analysis of a beam in an arbitrary spatial-mode basis – exemplified using Hermite-Gaussian and radial Laguerre-Gaussian modes. Such generalized delays correspond to optical implementations of fractional transforms; for example, the fractional Hankel transform is the generalized delay associated with the space of Laguerre-Gaussian modes, and an interferometer incorporating such a ‘delay’ obtains modal weights in the associated Hilbert space. By implementing an inherently stable, reconfigurable spatial-light-modulator-based polarization-interferometer, we have constructed a ‘Hilbert-space analyzer’ capable of projecting optical beams onto any modal basis.

Highlights

  • Interferometry is the cornerstone of fundamental investigations and precise measurements in optics[1]

  • The input beams are prepared by a single several large components (SLMs) (SLM0) that imprints a phase-only pattern on a Gaussian-mode laser beam, which is imaged to SLM1 that constitutes the input plane to the generalized interferometer

  • We have demonstrated that optical interferometry can be generalized to apply for any modal basis by replacing the traditional temporal delay with a generalized delay (GD): an optical transformation that ‘delays’ the beam in a Hilbert space spanned by the modal basis of interest

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Summary

Introduction

Interferometry is the cornerstone of fundamental investigations and precise measurements in optics[1]. The nature of light – both classical[2,3] and quantum4–6 – was unraveled largely through interferometric experiments, and the exquisite precision inherent in optical interferometry has been instrumental in metrology[7], bio-imaging[8], devising ultra-sensitive systems for the detection of gravitational waves[9], and enabling novel lithographic schemes[10] These examples share a common feature: interference results from combining beams with relative phases engendered by optical delays. We present a unifying principle for modal analysis by addressing the following question: can the traditional optical delay – one of the most fundamental concepts in optics – be extended beyond its implementation in the time domain to apply to Hilbert spaces associated with discrete spatial-mode bases? Sweeping the order of a fractional transform corresponds to varying a temporal delay in traditional interferometry – each in its own Hilbert space

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