Paper
31 August 2007 Single photons cannot be extracted from the light of multi-atom light sources
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Abstract
Throughout the development and confirmation of the photon concept, "Gedankenexperiments" have been invoked where a light source is attenuated until "only one photon is in the apparatus." Such a statement requires, however, knowledge on details of the light generation process, which were not known until the advent of true single-photon light sources such as isolated single atoms or molecules. Here, starting from a two atom light source, it is shown that probably multi-atom or multi-molecule light sources do not generate, even not in small fractions, antibunching photons and that attenuation down to one photon per time unit is not reliably possible. Thus, one of the strongest arguments in favour of the existence of single "photons" in free space, the accumulation time argument, which discusses the absorption of a single photon by a single atom or molecule, becomes questionable.
© (2007) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Karl Otto Greulich "Single photons cannot be extracted from the light of multi-atom light sources", Proc. SPIE 6664, The Nature of Light: What Are Photons?, 66640B (31 August 2007); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.735798
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Cited by 2 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Chemical species

Light sources

Molecules

Sensors

Particles

Single photon

Light

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