Fundamental limits to observing squeezing via balanced homodyne detection

Fundamental limits to observing squeezing via balanced homodyne detection

  • Braunstein, S. L. and Crouch, D. D. (1991): Physical Review A 43, 330-337.

    ABSTRACT: A photodetector's electronic bandwidth is the frequency range over which beats between different frequencies in the input can be observed in the output. The output of a balanced homodyne detector, the prototypical device for detecting squeezed light, consists of beats between a signal to be measured and a local oscillator. Beats between the signal and quantum local-oscillator fluctuations lead to noise that degrades the observed squeezing. Through wide-band calculations, we show that this noise contains contributions from the entire signal bandwidth, even when this bandwidth is orders of magnitude larger than the detector's electronic bandwidth. This allows us to place an upper limit on the total power that can enter the detector's signal port (both signal and extraneous light) within the detector's optical bandwidth in order for a given level of squeezing to be observable.