Their work, presented as a review article in Nature Photonics, surveys recent progress in generating, manipulating and detecting quantum structured light. The study examines techniques such as on-chip integrated photonics, nonlinear optics and multiplane light conversion, which together provide a toolkit for engineering quantum states suited to different tasks.
According to corresponding author Professor Andrew Forbes from Wits, the field has advanced substantially over the last two decades. "The tailoring of quantum states, where quantum light is engineered for a particular purpose, has gathered pace of late, finally starting to show its full potential. Twenty years ago the toolkit for this was virtually empty. Today we have on-chip sources of quantum structured light that are compact and efficient, able to create and control quantum states."
One of the main benefits of quantum structured light is access to high-dimensional encoding alphabets, which can increase the amount of information carried per photon and improve resilience to noise. The authors describe this capability as a promising basis for secure quantum communication systems that must operate in realistic environments.
The review also addresses current limits when structured photons propagate through real-world channels. Some transmission paths remain unfavorable for spatially structured light, restricting distance compared with more established degrees of freedom such as polarization.
"Although we have made amazing progress, there are still challenging issues," Forbes notes. "The distance reach with structured light, both classical and quantum, remains very low ... but this is also an opportunity, stimulating the search for more abstract degrees of freedom to exploit." The authors emphasize that understanding and mitigating channel-induced distortions is central to translating these advances into deployed quantum networks.
One direction highlighted in the article is the use of quantum states with topological properties that can offer inherent protection against certain perturbations. "We have recently shown how quantum wave functions naturally have the potential to be topological, and this promises the preservation of quantum information even if the entanglement is fragile," Forbes explains.
The review documents progress in multidimensional entanglement, ultrafast temporal structuring and nonlinear quantum detection schemes, as well as chip-based sources that can generate and process quantum light in higher dimensions. Potential applications include high-resolution quantum imaging, precision measurements using structured photons and quantum networks that carry more information through multiple coupled channels.
The authors argue that these developments mark an inflection point for quantum optics with structured light. Further work will focus on increasing the dimensionality of the states, boosting photon numbers and designing quantum light that can maintain its properties in realistic optical settings.
Research Report:Progress in quantum structured light
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