Single-plasmon interferences

Sci Adv. 2016 Mar 11;2(3):e1501574. doi: 10.1126/sciadv.1501574. eCollection 2016 Mar.

Abstract

Surface plasmon polaritons are electromagnetic waves coupled to collective electron oscillations propagating along metal-dielectric interfaces, exhibiting a bosonic character. Recent experiments involving surface plasmons guided by wires or stripes allowed the reproduction of quantum optics effects, such as antibunching with a single surface plasmon state, coalescence with a two-plasmon state, conservation of squeezing, or entanglement through plasmonic channels. We report the first direct demonstration of the wave-particle duality for a single surface plasmon freely propagating along a planar metal-air interface. We develop a platform that enables two complementary experiments, one revealing the particle behavior of the single-plasmon state through antibunching, and the other one where the interferences prove its wave nature. This result opens up new ways to exploit quantum conversion effects between different bosonic species as shown here with photons and polaritons.

Keywords: physics; plasmonic device; quantum optics; surface plasmon; wave-particle duality.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Surface Plasmon Resonance*