ABSTRACT

The genesis of quantum optics can be found in the Dirac discussion on interference as disclosed in The Principles of Quantum Mechanics. This is a masterful and prophetic discussion that begins by considering a roughly monochromatic light source. The discussion continues by considering a beam of light consisting of a large number of photons. Besides Dirac, useful references on interferometry include Steel, Meaburn and Born and Wolf. The Hanbury Brown–Twiss effect originates in interferometric measurements performed by an “intensity interferometer” used for astronomical observations. A diagram of the stellar intensity interferometer used to determine the diameter of stars is depicted. Two-beam interferometers are optical devices that divide and then recombine a light beam. It is on recombination of the beams that interference occurs. The most well-known two-beam interferometers are the Sagnac interferometer, the Mach–Zehnder interferometer, and the Michelson interferometer.