Abstract

A new fourth-order interference experiment based on detecting photon pairs in coincidence has been carried out. A Mach-Zehnder type of interferometer is used, with the two photons generated simultaneously in the process of down-conversion as inputs and two photon counting detectors at the two outputs. The optical path difference can be varied piezoelectrically. It is found that the coincidence counting rate, after subtraction of accidentals, exhibits a sinusoidal variation with the optical path difference as predicted by quantum mechanics, but in violation of the laws of classical optics. This is another non-classical interference effeet. By contrast, two light beams derived from a He:Ne laser used as inputs to the interferometer, do not produce any fourth order interference.

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