Resolution in Two-Photon Imaging: A Local Manifestation of Entanglement

Abstract

The resolution of a classical imaging system is limited by diffraction. This limit can be overcome, for example, by implementing various forms of localization microscopy in which the center of a fluorescence distribution is estimated to an accuracy scaling with the square root of the number of detected photons, N . In quantum imaging the object can be illuminated using correlated photon-pairs, leading early work to suggest that a 2 improvement could be obtained as a result of averaging the position of N = 2 events. However, similar to quantum lithography, which relies upon quantum illumination using entangled photon-pairs and two-photon absorption, the minimum resolvable feature size is reduced by a factor of 2, not just 2 . Quantum imaging schemes can also lead to a factor of 2 improvement. By using a similar source of correlated photon-pairs to illuminate an object, a single-photon sensitive camera to detect the photon-pairs, and an image processing algorithm to record and sum the bisector positions of the transmitted photon-pairs, we realize a similar factor of x2 improvement in image resolution, surpassing that of most earlier quantum imaging work.

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ACS Photonics. 2025, vol. 12, issue 10, p. 5594-5604.
https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acsphotonics.5c01310

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Peer-reviewed

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en

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Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
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