Reversible inter-degree-of-freedom optical-coherence conversion via entropy swapping

Opt Express. 2022 Aug 1;30(16):29584-29597. doi: 10.1364/OE.463852.

Abstract

The entropy associated with an optical field quantifies the field fluctuations and thus its coherence. Any binary optical degree-of-freedom (DoF) - such as polarization or the field at a pair of points in space - can each carry up to one bit of entropy. We demonstrate here that entropy can be reversibly swapped between different DoFs, such that coherence is converted back and forth between them without loss of energy. Specifically, starting with a spatially coherent but unpolarized field carrying one bit of entropy, we unitarily convert the coherence from the spatial DoF to polarization to produce a spatially incoherent but polarized field by swapping the entropy between the two DoFs. Next, we implement the inverse unitary operator, thus converting the coherence back to yield once again a spatially coherent yet unpolarized field. We exploit the intermediate stage between the two coherence conversions - where the spatial coherence has been converted to the polarization DoF - to verify that the field has become immune to the deleterious impact of spatial phase scrambling. Maximizing the spatial entropy protects the spatial DoF by preventing it from taking on any additional fluctuations. After the second coherence conversion, spatial coherence is readily retrieved, and the effect of spatial phase scrambling circumvented.