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Valerio Pruneri

Institució Catalana de Recerca i Estudis Avançats

ORCID: 0000-0002-6425-9332

Publishes on Photonic and Optical Devices, Photorefractive and Nonlinear Optics, Advanced Fiber Laser Technologies. 410 papers and 14.9k citations.

410Publications
14.9kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Significant-Loophole-Free Test of Bell’s Theorem with Entangled Photons
Marissa Giustina, Marijn A. M. Versteegh, Sören Wengerowsky et al.|Physical Review Letters|2015
Cited by 1.5kOpen Access

Local realism is the worldview in which physical properties of objects exist independently of measurement and where physical influences cannot travel faster than the speed of light. Bell's theorem states that this worldview is incompatible with the predictions of quantum mechanics, as is expressed in Bell's inequalities. Previous experiments convincingly supported the quantum predictions. Yet, every experiment requires assumptions that provide loopholes for a local realist explanation. Here, we report a Bell test that closes the most significant of these loopholes simultaneously. Using a well-optimized source of entangled photons, rapid setting generation, and highly efficient superconducting detectors, we observe a violation of a Bell inequality with high statistical significance. The purely statistical probability of our results to occur under local realism does not exceed 3.74×10^{-31}, corresponding to an 11.5 standard deviation effect.

Strong Loophole-Free Test of Local Realism
Lynden K. Shalm, Evan Meyer-Scott, Bradley Christensen et al.|Physical Review Letters|2015
Cited by 1.4kOpen Access

We present a loophole-free violation of local realism using entangled photon pairs. We ensure that all relevant events in our Bell test are spacelike separated by placing the parties far enough apart and by using fast random number generators and high-speed polarization measurements. A high-quality polarization-entangled source of photons, combined with high-efficiency, low-noise, single-photon detectors, allows us to make measurements without requiring any fair-sampling assumptions. Using a hypothesis test, we compute p values as small as 5.9×10^{-9} for our Bell violation while maintaining the spacelike separation of our events. We estimate the degree to which a local realistic system could predict our measurement choices. Accounting for this predictability, our smallest adjusted p value is 2.3×10^{-7}. We therefore reject the hypothesis that local realism governs our experiment.

Refractometry based on a photonic crystal fiber interferometer
Rajan Jha, Joel Villatoro, G. Badenes et al.|Optics Letters|2009
Cited by 235

We report a simple and compact modal interferometer for applications in refractometry. The device consists of a stub of large-mode-area photonic crystal fiber (PCF) spliced between standard single-mode fibers. In the splice regions the voids of the PCF are fully collapsed, thus allowing the coupling and recombination of PCF core and cladding modes. The device is highly stable over time, has low temperature sensitivity, and is suitable for measuring indices in the 1.330-1.440 range. The measure of the refractive index is carried out by monitoring the shift of the interference pattern.

Optical switching at 1.55 <i>μ</i>m in silicon racetrack resonators using phase change materials
Miquel Rudé, Josselin Pello, Robert E. Simpson et al.|Applied Physics Letters|2013
Cited by 233Open Access

An optical switch operating at a wavelength of 1.55 μm and showing a 12 dB modulation depth is introduced. The device is implemented in a silicon racetrack resonator using an overcladding layer of the phase change data storage material Ge2Sb2Te5, which exhibits high contrast in its optical properties upon transitions between its crystalline and amorphous structural phases. These transitions are triggered using a pulsed laser diode at λ = 975 nm and used to tune the resonant frequency of the resonator and the resultant modulation depth of the 1.55 μm transmitted light.