Sculpting Light: Using Photon Momentum to Create New Imaging Techniques

Date

Friday September 19, 2025
1:30 pm - 2:30 pm

Location

STI A
Event Category

Jeff Lundeen
Nexus for Quantum Technology, Physics Department, University of Ottawa

 

Abstract

Imaging is one of the oldest and most applied of the sciences, dating back at least two millennia to the first lenses and Euclid’s Optics. Until recently, most if not all optical elements, such as lenses, diffraction gratings and phase plates, have functioned by acting on a photon’s position. In contrast, this talk will describe our experiments that rely on a photon’s momentum, i.e. its angle, to create novel types of imaging systems. For example, we have used photon pairs that are quantum-entangled in momentum to image in the presence of turbulence, background light, and even without aiming a camera at the object. For single photons, I will show that through controlling momentum one can create arbitrary optical transformations, including that of free-space itself. The latter effectively compresses optical propagation into a thin plate, a device we call a "spaceplate". If perfected, spaceplates could one day replace the space between a lens and the imaging sensor, enabling flat thin cameras. I will finish by outlining prospects for even more exotic and useful imaging systems that function by acting on a photon’s momentum.

Biography

Dr. Jeff Lundeen's experimental and theoretical research uses individual particles of light, photons, to test and apply ideas from quantum physics. He is an Associate Professor in the Physics Dept. of the University of Ottawa. He did an undergraduate degree in physics at Âé¶¹ÍøÕ¾ in Kingston, Ontario. After, he did a MSc and PhD with Dr. Aephraim Steinberg at the University of in experimental quantum optics and quantum information. As a Postdoctoral Fellow, he did experimental research in the group of Prof. Ian Walmsely at the Clarendon Laboratory, University of Oxford. He returned to Canada and became a staff scientist in optical metrology at the National Research Council (NRC) of Canada. In 2013, he joined the University of Ottawa.

Jeff was also a Tier II CRC in Quantum Photonics for ten years and is the Director of the UOttawa Institute, Nexus for Quantum Technologies. 
 

Timbits, coffee, tea will be served in STI A before the colloquium.

 

 

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