Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 April 2013
In Section 11.5 we showed that, although the complex amplitude of the electromagnetic field has a well-defined value in any coherent state, yet the real and imaginary (Hermitian and anti-Hermitian) parts of the field fluctuate with equal dispersions. The phenomenon of vacuum fluctuations is a manifestation of this effect, because the vacuum state is an example of a particular coherent state. This behavior is quite different from that of an ordinary, classical field. In a squeezed state, which is even more non-classical, as we shall see, one part of the field fluctuates less and another part fluctuates more than in the vacuum state. In general, a squeezed state is one in which the distribution of canonical variables over the phase space has been distorted or ‘squeezed’ in such a way that the dispersion of one variable is reduced at the cost of an increase in the dispersion of the other variable. In the following we shall examine the properties of squeezed states when the two canonical variables are two quadratures of the electromagnetic field. Although the squeezing terminology is sometimes applied to variables other than the two field quadratures, it is less meaningful in those cases. A number of review articles on squeezing have been published and can be consulted for more details (Walls, 1983; Schumaker, 1986; Loudon and Knight, 1987; Teich and Saleh, 1989, 1990; Kimble, 1992).
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