Abstract

A quantum theory of the lossless beam splitter is given in terms of the quasi mode theory of macroscopic canonical quantization used to treat problems in cavity quantum electrodynamics and quantum optics. A Heisenberg picture approach to quantum scattering theory is applied, in which the input and output operators that are related via the scattering operator are linked to quantum optical measurements described via multi-time quantum correlation functions. In the application to the beam splitter the Heisenberg equations of motion for the input operators associated with the quasi mode annihilation operators are formally solved in a rotating picture to show that the unitary transform of the incident quasi mode annihilation operator (via the scattering operator) is just a linear combination of the incident and reflected quasi mode annihilation operators, in accordance with assumptions made in previous treatments of the beam splitter. The results depend on conservation of the transverse component of the wave vector, which follows from the form of the quasi mode-quasi mode coupling constants, and on conservation of the unperturbed energy, which follows from scattering theory. The applicability of quantum scattering theory to the beam splitter is justified in the usual situation where integrated one photon and two photon detection rates are finite for incident light field states of interest.

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