Abstract

Birefringence in optical fibers poses a challenge to controllably delivering polarized light. Strain-induced birefringence caused by bends in the fiber, vibrations, or a large temperature gradient can significantly alter the polarization, making it particularly difficult to deliver polarization states to low-temperature environments by fiber. In this paper, we investigate the transmission of polarized light through a fiber and discuss a method we have developed for delivering arbitrarily polarized light to the base stage of a dilution refrigerator using a standard optical fiber. We have created a compact, cryogenic optical system to identify the polarization of the delivered light, while room-temperature waveplates and a mathematical fiber model are used to fully characterize and compensate for the fiber's birefringent effects. We show here that we are able to deliver horizontal, vertical, diagonal, anti-diagonal, right circular, and left circular polarization states to milli-Kelvin temperatures, with state fidelities of greater than 0.96 being achieved in all cases. Additionally, we demonstrate that we can deliver randomly selected elliptical states through a standard fiber to the refrigerator. This opens up new opportunities for fiber-based optical experiments using polarized light, such as quantum information experiments using quantum states encoded in the polarization of single photons.

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