LNF Mini-Workshop Series: Fundamental and Quantum Physics with Lasers

Europe/Rome
Aula Bruno Touschek (Laboratori Nazionali di Frascati dell'INFN)

Aula Bruno Touschek

Laboratori Nazionali di Frascati dell'INFN

Via Enrico Fermi, 40 00044 Frascati
Alessandra Fantoni (LNF), Alessandro Paoloni (LNF), Manuela Boscolo (LNF), Simone Dell'Agnello (LNF)
Description

After 54 years since their invention, lasers are nowadays used in a wide variety of applications, including, exactly 50 years ago, precision laser tracking of satellites and the Moon. This workshop is dedicated to fundamental research that benefits from laser application: from quantum communication to new accelerator techniques, from space geodesy and lunar physics to gravitational physics (including detection of gravitational waves, precise measurements of G, the Newton constant, of Gdot/G, of the PPN beta and more). This workshop is conceived also in preparation of the "International Year of Light and Light-based Technologies (IYL 2015)  
Participants
  • Alessandra Fantoni
  • Alessandro Paoloni
  • Andrea Longhin
  • Angela D. V. Di Virgilio
  • Chiara Mondaini
  • Claudio Cantone
  • Emanuele Ciocci
  • Enrico Costa
  • Fabio Villa
  • Francesco Fidecaro
  • Giordano Patrizi
  • Giuseppe Vallone
  • Guglielmo M. Tino
  • Lorenzo Salvatori
  • Luca Porcelli
  • Maiello Mauro
  • Manuela Boscolo
  • Manuele Martini
  • Maria Teresa Colosini
  • Mattia Tibuzzi
  • Paolo Mataloni
  • Paolo Tuscano
  • Paolo Tuscano
  • Roberto Peron
  • Ruggero Caravita
  • Stefania Contessa
    • 1
      Welcome
      Speaker: Umberto Dosselli (PD)
    • 2
      "Celebrating 50 years of Satellite and Lunar Laser Ranging" S. Dell'Agnello (LNF) for G. Bianco (ASI)
      Speaker: Simone Dell'Agnello (LNF)
      Slides
    • 3
      Quantum Communications in space using satellites
      Quantum Communications (QC) on planetary scale require complementary channels including ground and satellite links. Here we report QC, e.g. the faithful transmission of qubits, from Space to ground by exploiting satellite corner cube retroreflectors acting as transmitter in orbit. Qubit pulses are sent at 100 MHz repetition rate and are reflected back at the single photon level from the satellite, thus mimicking a QKD source on Space. Synchronization is performed by using the bright SLR pulses at repetition rate of 10 Hz allowing for sub-nanosecond qubit arrival identification, with a factor of ten improvement with respect to the technique based on orbital parameters exploited in the first demonstration of the single photon exchange with satellites. From the link budget, the mean photon number of the state leaving the satellite has been estimated to be of the order of unity. We demonstrate the achievement of QBER of 3.7% (from LARETS satellite) and 6,7 % (from STARLETTE satellite), suitable for QKD applications. On the base of these findings, we envisage a two-way QKD protocol exploiting modulated retroreflectors that necessitates a minimal payload on satellite thus facilitating the expansion of Space QC and Quantum Physics tests in Space. Indeed, quantum communication in space give the opportunity of testing quantum physics in new environment and probing the laws of nature at large distance, beyond the capabilities of purely earth-based laboratories. The generation and distribution of entanglement, the “characteristic trait of quantum mechanics”, between two distant locations is crucial from the point of view of fundamental physics and for Quantum Information protocols. In a long term vision, experiments on quantum entanglement and quantum superposition in space are the starting point for fundamental tests on the relation between quantum phenomena and gravitation. On this base we also review possible tests of Quantum Physics in space.
      Speaker: G. Vallone (INFN Padova)
      Slides
    • 4
      Integrated Quantum Optics for Space
      Speaker: Prof. Paolo Mataloni (Sapienza Università di Roma - Dipartimento di Fisica)
      Slides
    • 11:30
      Coffee Break

      Poster Session (all day):
      Emanuele Ciocci, SCF_Lab: TEST OF GENERAL RELATIVITY USING LUNAR LASER RANGING DATA AND THE PLANETARY EPHEMERIS PROGRAM.

    • 5
      Laser excitation of positronium to ryberg levels in high magnetic fields to produce a cold beam of antihydrogen in the AEgIS experiment
      Efficient Rydberg positronium production in high magnetic field (1T) is one of the key objectives of the AEGIS experiment at CERN (AD-6), aimed at the first direct measurement of Earth gravitational constant on a neutral antimatter system. AEGIS experimental scheme uses a charge exchange reaction between Rydberg Ps and trapped cold antiprotons to produce cold antihydrogen, subsequently accelerated via electric fields to form a free-falling beam towards a Moirè deflectometer. Thermalized positronium is first generated in a high magnetic field environment in a nanoporous silica target and later laser-excited to Rydberg levels with a two step scheme: first, from the ground state to the third excited state and subsequently to a selectable Rydberg level within the range n=16-23. In this talk, we will present the topic of exciting positronium in AEGIS conditions together with the results obtained from the current laser setup in view of the upcoming measurements
      Speaker: Ruggero Caravita (INFN Genova)
      Slides
    • 6
      Precision measurement of the fundamental gravitational constant G with laser-cooled atomic fountains
      Speaker: Guglielmo Maria Tino (FI)
    • 13:20
      Lunch
    • 7
      Observing the two-photon Breit-Wheeler process for the first time
      The Breit-Wheeler process—the formation of an electron-positron pair in the collision of two photons—is the simplest way in which matter can be made from light. As the inverse process of two-photon annihilation, it is one of the most basic processes in quantum electrodynamics, as well as being ubiquitous in high-energy astrophysics. However, in the 80 years since it was predicted theoretically, this interaction has never been directly observed. Here, I present the design of a new class of photon-photon collider [O. J. Pike et al, Nature Photonics 8, 434 (2014)], which is capable of detecting significant numbers of Breit-Wheeler pairs on current-generation laser facilities. I further discuss our ongoing efforts to implement this scheme in practice.
      Speaker: O. Pike (Imperial College)
      Slides
    • 8
      A photon-photon scattering machine based on twin photo-injectors and Compton sources
      We will illustrate a conceptual lay-out for a machine capable to provide two colliding photon beams with energy 0.5-1.5 MeV at high luminosity, in excess of 10^25, so to drive a photon-photon scattering experiment able to produce a few events per day. The machine is quite compact and comprises two high power Yb:Yag collision lasers mutuated from the ELI-NP-GBS project. Strong focusing of the two counter-propagating high brightness electron beams is needed to achieve the required luminosity and proper beam deflection must be applied to avoid contamination from e-/e- interactions. A straw man machine design is presented with predicted costs.
      Speaker: Luca Serafini (MI)
    • 15:50
      Coffee Break

      Poster Session (all day):
      Emanuele Ciocci, SCF_Lab: TEST OF GENERAL RELATIVITY USING LUNAR LASER RANGING DATA AND THE PLANETARY EPHEMERIS PROGRAM.

    • 9
      The VIRGO laser light for probing the metric of the space-time
      Speaker: Fulvio Ricci (ROMA1)
      Slides
    • 10
      Applied and fundamental physics with ringlasers
      Speaker: Angela Dora Vittoria Di Virgilio (PI)
      Slides