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Phys. Rev. D 26, 1817–1839 (1982)

Quantum limits on noise in linear amplifiers

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Carlton M. Caves
Theoretical Astrophysics 130-33, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California 91125

Received 18 August 1981; published in the issue dated 15 October 1982

How much noise does quantum mechanics require a linear amplifier to add to a signal it processes? An analysis of narrow-band amplifiers (single-mode input and output) yields a fundamental theorem for phase-insensitive linear amplifiers; it requires such an amplifier, in the limit of high gain, to add noise which, referred to the input, is at least as large as the half-quantum of zero-point fluctuations. For phase-sensitive linear amplifiers, which can respond differently to the two quadrature phases ("cosωt" and "sinωt"), the single-mode analysis yields an amplifier uncertainty principle—a lower limit on the product of the noises added to the two phases. A multimode treatment of linear amplifiers generalizes the single-mode analysis to amplifiers with nonzero bandwidth. The results for phase-insensitive amplifiers remain the same, but for phase-sensitive amplifiers there emerge bandwidth-dependent corrections to the single-mode results. Specifically, there is a bandwidth-dependent lower limit on the noise carried by one quadrature phase of a signal and a corresponding lower limit on the noise a high-gain linear amplifier must add to one quadrature phase. Particular attention is focused on developing a multimode description of signals with unequal noise in the two quadrature phases.

© 1982 The American Physical Society

URL:
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevD.26.1817
DOI:
10.1103/PhysRevD.26.1817
PACS: