3 resultados para OPEN QUANTUM-SYSTEMS

em Repositório Institucional da Universidade de Aveiro - Portugal


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In this thesis we perform a detailed analysis of the state of polarization (SOP) of light scattering process using a concatenation of ber-coil based polarization controllers (PCs). We propose a polarization-mode dispersion (PMD) emulator, built through the concatenation of bercoil based PCs and polarization-maintaining bers (PMFs), capable of generate accurate rst- and second-order PMD statistics. We analyze the co-propagation of two optical waves inside a highbirefringence ber. The evolution along the ber of the relative SOP between the two signals is modeled by the de nition of the degree of co-polarization parameter. We validate the model for the degree of co-polarization experimentally, exploring the polarization dependence of the four-wave mixing e ect into a ber with high birefringence. We also study the interaction between signal and noise mediated by Kerr e ect in optical bers. A model accurately describing ampli ed spontaneous emission noise in systems with distributed Raman gain is derived. We show that the noise statistics depends on the propagation distance and on the signal power, and that for distances longer than 120 km and signal powers higher than 6 mW it deviates signi catively from the Gaussian distribution. We explore the all-optical polarization control process based on the stimulated Raman scattering e ect. Mapping parameters like the degree of polarization (DOP), we show that the preferred ampli cation of one particular polarization component of the signal allows a polarization pulling over a wavelength range of 60 nm. The e ciency of the process is higher close to the maximum Raman gain wavelength, where the DOP is roughly constant for a wavelength range of 15 nm. Finally, we study the polarization control in quantum key distribution (QKD) systems with polarization encoding. A model for the quantum bit error rate estimation in QKD systems with time-division multiplexing and wavelength-division multiplexing based polarization control schemes is derived.

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As comunicações quânticas aplicam as leis fundamentais da física quântica para codificar, transmitir, guardar e processar informação. A mais importante e bem-sucedida aplicação é a distribuição de chaves quânticas (QKD). Os sistemas de QKD são suportados por tecnologias capazes de processar fotões únicos. Nesta tese analisamos a geração, transmissão e deteção de fotões únicos e entrelaçados em fibras óticas. É proposta uma fonte de fotões única baseada no processo clássico de mistura de quatro ondas (FWM) em fibras óticas num regime de baixas potências. Implementamos essa fonte no laboratório, e desenvolvemos um modelo teórico capaz de descrever corretamente o processo de geração de fotões únicos. O modelo teórico considera o papel das nãolinearidades da fibra e os efeitos da polarização na geração de fotões através do processo de FWM. Analisamos a estatística da fonte de fotões baseada no processo clássico de FWM em fibras óticas. Derivamos um modelo teórico capaz de descrever a estatística dessa fonte de fotões. Mostramos que a estatística da fonte de fotões evolui de térmica num regime de baixas potências óticas, para Poissoniana num regime de potências óticas moderadas. Validamos experimentalmente o modelo teórico, através do uso de fotodetetores de avalanche, do método estimativo da máxima verossimilhança e do algoritmo de maximização de expectativa. Estudamos o processo espontâneo de FWM como uma fonte condicional de fotões únicos. Analisamos a estatística dessa fonte em termos da função condicional de coerência de segunda ordem, considerando o espalhamento de Raman na geração de pares de fotões, e a perda durante a propagação de fotões numa fibra ótica padrão. Identificamos regimes apropriados onde a fonte é quase ideal. Fontes de pares de fotões implementadas em fibras óticas fornecem uma solução prática ao problema de acoplamento que surge quando os pares de fotões são gerados fora da fibra. Exploramos a geração de pares de fotões através do processo espontâneo de FWM no interior de guias de onda com suceptibilidade elétrica de terceira ordem. Descrevemos a geração de pares de fotões em meios com elevado coeficiente de absorção, e identificamos regimes ótimos para o rácio contagens coincidentes/acidentais (CAR) e para a desigualdade de Clauser, Horne, Shimony, and Holt (CHSH), para o qual o compromisso entre perda do guia de onda e não-linearidades maximiza esses parâmetros.

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Wireless communication technologies have become widely adopted, appearing in heterogeneous applications ranging from tracking victims, responders and equipments in disaster scenarios to machine health monitoring in networked manufacturing systems. Very often, applications demand a strictly bounded timing response, which, in distributed systems, is generally highly dependent on the performance of the underlying communication technology. These systems are said to have real-time timeliness requirements since data communication must be conducted within predefined temporal bounds, whose unfulfillment may compromise the correct behavior of the system and cause economic losses or endanger human lives. The potential adoption of wireless technologies for an increasingly broad range of application scenarios has made the operational requirements more complex and heterogeneous than before for wired technologies. On par with this trend, there is an increasing demand for the provision of cost-effective distributed systems with improved deployment, maintenance and adaptation features. These systems tend to require operational flexibility, which can only be ensured if the underlying communication technology provides both time and event triggered data transmission services while supporting on-line, on-the-fly parameter modification. Generally, wireless enabled applications have deployment requirements that can only be addressed through the use of batteries and/or energy harvesting mechanisms for power supply. These applications usually have stringent autonomy requirements and demand a small form factor, which hinders the use of large batteries. As the communication support may represent a significant part of the energy requirements of a station, the use of power-hungry technologies is not adequate. Hence, in such applications, low-range technologies have been widely adopted. In fact, although low range technologies provide smaller data rates, they spend just a fraction of the energy of their higher-power counterparts. The timeliness requirements of data communications, in general, can be met by ensuring the availability of the medium for any station initiating a transmission. In controlled (close) environments this can be guaranteed, as there is a strict regulation of which stations are installed in the area and for which purpose. Nevertheless, in open environments, this is hard to control because no a priori abstract knowledge is available of which stations and technologies may contend for the medium at any given instant. Hence, the support of wireless real-time communications in unmanaged scenarios is a highly challenging task. Wireless low-power technologies have been the focus of a large research effort, for example, in the Wireless Sensor Network domain. Although bringing extended autonomy to battery powered stations, such technologies are known to be negatively influenced by similar technologies contending for the medium and, especially, by technologies using higher power transmissions over the same frequency bands. A frequency band that is becoming increasingly crowded with competing technologies is the 2.4 GHz Industrial, Scientific and Medical band, encompassing, for example, Bluetooth and ZigBee, two lowpower communication standards which are the base of several real-time protocols. Although these technologies employ mechanisms to improve their coexistence, they are still vulnerable to transmissions from uncoordinated stations with similar technologies or to higher power technologies such as Wi- Fi, which hinders the support of wireless dependable real-time communications in open environments. The Wireless Flexible Time-Triggered Protocol (WFTT) is a master/multi-slave protocol that builds on the flexibility and timeliness provided by the FTT paradigm and on the deterministic medium capture and maintenance provided by the bandjacking technique. This dissertation presents the WFTT protocol and argues that it allows supporting wireless real-time communication services with high dependability requirements in open environments where multiple contention-based technologies may dispute the medium access. Besides, it claims that it is feasible to provide flexible and timely wireless communications at the same time in open environments. The WFTT protocol was inspired on the FTT paradigm, from which higher layer services such as, for example, admission control has been ported. After realizing that bandjacking was an effective technique to ensure the medium access and maintenance in open environments crowded with contention-based communication technologies, it was recognized that the mechanism could be used to devise a wireless medium access protocol that could bring the features offered by the FTT paradigm to the wireless domain. The performance of the WFTT protocol is reported in this dissertation with a description of the implemented devices, the test-bed and a discussion of the obtained results.