Abstract
An experiment has been performed in which signal and idler photons produced in the process of parametric downconversion are mixed at a beam splitter, and the mixed beam splitter outputs are directed to two photodetectors feeding a coincidence counter. Two optical filters with passbands centered at frequencies ω1, and ω2 are inserted just before the detectors. When the two-photon coincidence rate is measured as a function of the time delay δτ introduced between the two photons, it is found that the rate exhibits a cosine variation with δτ at the difference frequency |ω1− ω2|. The experimental results are consistent with a quantum analysis of the experiment but not with a classical treatment. We have observed a beat note with a period of 37 fs, which is several orders of magnitude shorter than the resolving time of the photodetectors. In principle a beat note should be observable at optical frequencies with this technique.
© 1988 Optical Society of America
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