Prior to the development of the first lasers in the 1960s, optical coherence was not a subject with which many scientists had much acquaintance, even though early contributions to the field were made by several distinguished physicists, including Max von Laue, Erwin Schrödinger and Frits Zernike. However, the situation changed once it was realized that the remarkable properties of laser light depended on its coherence. An earlier development that also triggered interest in optical coherence was a series of important experiments by Hanbury Brown and Twiss in the 1950s, showing that correlations between the fluctuations of mutually coherent beams of thermal light could be measured by photoelectric correlation and two-photon coincidence counting experiments. The interpretation of these experiments was, however, surrounded by controversy, which emphasized the need for understanding the coherence properties of light and their effect on the interaction between light and matter.
Undoubtedly it was the realization that the subject of optical coherence was not well understood that prompted the late Dr E. U. Condon to invite us, more than three decades ago, to prepare a review article on the subject of coherence and fluctuations of light for publication in the Reviews of Modern Physics, which he then edited. The article was well received and frequently cited, and this encouraged us to expand it into a book. Little did we know then how rapidly the subject would develop and that it would become the cornerstone of an essentially new field, now known as quantum optics. Also the first experiments dealing with non-classical states of light were reported in the 1970s, and they provided the impetus for the new quantum mechanical developments.
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