Squeezed Light Explained

QCLS Quantum Sensing Cluster

Squeezed Light Explained

Squeezed light is a nonclassical state of light where quantum uncertainty is reduced in one measurement variable, or quadrature, while uncertainty increases in the conjugate variable. In photonics, that trade-off can be engineered to improve precision measurements where the reduced-noise quadrature is the one that matters.

Squeezed StatesQuantum NoiseShot NoiseInterferometryPrecision Sensing
X
P
Quantum Noisevacuum fluctuations set a measurement floor
Squeezingreduce uncertainty in one quadrature
Anti-Squeezingincrease uncertainty in the other quadrature
Better Readoutmeasure the quieter variable with more precision
Squeezed light does not remove uncertaintyit redistributes uncertainty into the variable you can tolerate
Squeezed light turns quantum noise into an engineering design parameter.
Visual Technical Reference

Squeezed Light at a Glance

This study graphic summarizes the core squeezed-light lesson: what squeezed light is, how quantum noise and quadratures work, why squeezing obeys the uncertainty principle, how squeezed states are generated, where they improve sensing and interferometry, why LIGO is an important real-world example, and which loss and phase-control challenges determine practical performance.


Squeezed Light infographic explaining quantum noise, quadratures, squeezing, generation methods, sensing applications, LIGO relevance, and engineering challenges

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Executive Technical Summary

Squeezed light reduces quantum uncertainty where a measurement needs it most.

Light has quantum fluctuations. Even a perfect laser or vacuum field has uncertainty in measurable field variables. Squeezed light reshapes that uncertainty so one quadrature has less noise than a standard coherent state or vacuum state, while the conjugate quadrature has more noise.

The result is not “free precision.” It is a controlled trade-off. If a sensor measures the quieter quadrature, squeezed light can improve sensitivity beyond ordinary shot-noise limits in specific regimes.

Squeezed light does not break the uncertainty principle. It uses the uncertainty principle intelligently.

What Is Squeezed Light?

Squeezed light is light with redistributed quantum uncertainty.

A classical wave can be described by amplitude and phase. In quantum optics, these ideas are represented by field quadratures. For ordinary coherent light, quantum uncertainty is balanced between quadratures. For squeezed light, one quadrature is compressed below the ordinary quantum noise level while the other is stretched.

This is why squeezed states are often drawn as ellipses in phase space. A circular noise distribution becomes an ellipse: narrower in the squeezed direction, wider in the anti-squeezed direction.

Coherent light: balanced uncertainty in X and P

Squeezed light: lower uncertainty in X, higher uncertainty in P

Measurement advantage: use the low-noise quadrature for the signal of interest

Quantum Noise

Quantum noise is not bad engineering. It is built into light.

Photonics is often limited by technical noise: temperature drift, vibration, electronics, laser instability, imperfect optics, and background light. But even after technical noise is reduced, quantum noise can remain.

Shot noise arises because light is quantized into photons. Vacuum fluctuations can enter unused optical ports and affect measurements. Radiation pressure noise can appear when fluctuating photon momentum pushes mirrors or mechanical systems. Squeezed light is valuable because it targets these quantum noise sources directly.

Shot Noise

Photon counting uncertainty

At low light or high precision, discrete photon statistics create measurement noise.

Vacuum Fluctuations

Empty space is not quiet

Quantum vacuum fields can enter optical systems and contribute noise.

Back Action

Measurement can disturb

Radiation pressure or measurement interaction can push the system being measured.

Quadratures and Phase Space

The key idea is choosing which uncertainty matters.

Optical field quadratures are like two connected measurement axes. They are often compared to position and momentum for an oscillator. Because they are conjugate variables, reducing uncertainty in one quadrature increases uncertainty in the other.

For sensing, that is useful when the signal is encoded mainly in one quadrature. A squeezed state can reduce noise in that quadrature and move the extra uncertainty into a quadrature the experiment is less sensitive to.

Squeezing is useful only when the reduced-noise quadrature lines up with the measurement you care about.

How Squeezed Light Is Made

Squeezed states are usually produced through nonlinear optical interactions.

Squeezed light is commonly generated using nonlinear optical processes where strong pump light interacts with a nonlinear medium. The process creates correlations between optical field fluctuations that reduce noise in one quadrature.

Optical Parametric Amplification

Nonlinear gain

A pump field drives a nonlinear crystal or resonator to create squeezed vacuum or squeezed light.

Four-Wave Mixing

Nonlinear mixing

Interactions between optical fields in fibers, atoms, or waveguides can generate squeezed states.

Optomechanics

Light-mechanical interaction

Coupling between light and mechanical motion can produce squeezed optical or mechanical states.

The exact method depends on wavelength, power, bandwidth, loss, chip platform, and whether the target application needs squeezed vacuum, bright squeezed light, two-mode squeezing, or frequency-dependent squeezing.

Squeezed Light in Quantum Sensing

Squeezed light can improve precision by reducing measurement noise.

Many optical sensors measure phase, displacement, intensity, timing, or frequency. If quantum noise limits the measurement, squeezed light can reduce the relevant noise component and improve sensitivity.

Sensor Type Measured Quantity Why Squeezing Helps
Interferometers Phase, displacement, path length Reduced phase noise can reveal smaller path changes.
Gravitational-Wave Detectors Mirror displacement from space-time strain Squeezed vacuum can reduce quantum noise in the detection band.
Biological Imaging Weak optical signals Lower measurement noise can improve sensitivity at lower illumination levels.
Spectroscopy Absorption, phase, molecular signatures Quantum-enhanced readout can detect smaller changes.
Optomechanical Sensors Motion, force, pressure Squeezing can help manage imprecision and back-action noise.
Real-World Example

Gravitational-wave detectors use squeezed light to reduce quantum noise.

One of the most important practical examples is gravitational-wave detection. These detectors measure incredibly small changes in the length of long interferometer arms. At that scale, quantum noise in the optical readout becomes a serious limit.

Squeezed light can reduce the quantum noise that hides weak gravitational-wave signals. More advanced versions use frequency-dependent squeezing, where the squeezing angle changes with frequency to balance shot noise and radiation-pressure noise across a wider band.

LIGO shows why squeezed light matters: it is not just a theoretical state of light. It is a deployed quantum technology used to improve one of the most sensitive measurement systems ever built.

Types of Squeezed States

Different squeezed-light states support different quantum photonic systems.

Squeezing is a broad family of nonclassical light states. Each type has different uses in sensing, communication, computing, and fundamental physics.

Squeezed Vacuum

No bright carrier required

A vacuum field with reduced noise in one quadrature. Important for interferometer readout.

Bright Squeezed Light

Squeezed fluctuations on a field

A nonzero optical field with reduced quantum noise in a chosen quadrature.

Amplitude Squeezing

Reduced intensity noise

Useful when amplitude or photon-number fluctuations limit the measurement.

Phase Squeezing

Reduced phase noise

Useful in phase-sensitive interferometry and displacement sensing.

Two-Mode Squeezing

Correlated optical modes

Closely related to entanglement and continuous-variable quantum information.

Frequency-Dependent Squeezing

Noise angle changes with frequency

Used when different noise sources dominate at different frequencies.

Integrated Photonics

Integrated photonics could bring squeezed-light generation onto chips.

Traditional squeezed-light systems often use carefully aligned nonlinear crystals, cavities, and bulk optical components. Integrated photonics can shrink the nonlinear medium, stabilize the optical path, and enable compact squeezed-light sources.

Chip-scale squeezing may use nonlinear waveguides, resonators, silicon nitride, lithium niobate, periodically poled materials, III-V platforms, or hybrid integration. The challenge is controlling loss because loss rapidly destroys squeezing.

Low-loss waveguides: squeezing is extremely sensitive to optical loss.
Nonlinear materials: strong nonlinear interaction helps generate squeezed states efficiently.
Resonators: optical cavities can enhance nonlinear interactions.
Detectors: high-efficiency homodyne or single-photon detection may be required.
Packaging: stable coupling, thermal control, and electronic control are essential.
Applications

Squeezed light matters wherever quantum noise limits measurement or information processing.

The clearest current application is precision sensing, but squeezed states also matter in continuous-variable quantum communication, quantum computing concepts, imaging, spectroscopy, and fundamental quantum optics.

Gravitational-Wave Detection

Sharper interferometers

Squeezed light can improve quantum-noise-limited detector sensitivity.

Quantum Sensing

Sub-shot-noise readout

Squeezing can reveal smaller signals when measurement noise dominates.

Quantum Imaging

Lower-noise optical measurement

Squeezed states can improve imaging or probing under carefully controlled conditions.

Spectroscopy

Small absorption and phase shifts

Reduced optical noise can improve detection of weak molecular signatures.

Continuous-Variable QI

Quantum information with field quadratures

Squeezed states are core resources for continuous-variable quantum protocols.

Quantum Networks

Entangled optical modes

Two-mode squeezing can create correlations useful in quantum communication research.

Engineering Challenges

Squeezing is fragile because loss and phase error quickly destroy the advantage.

Producing squeezed light is only the first step. The squeezed state must survive the optical system and align with the measurement. Loss, imperfect mode matching, detector inefficiency, phase noise, thermal drift, and excess technical noise can erase the advantage.

Optical Loss

The biggest enemy

Loss mixes ordinary vacuum noise back into the squeezed state.

Phase Control

The quiet axis must align

If the squeezing angle drifts, the sensor may measure the wrong quadrature.

Detector Efficiency

Readout must preserve squeezing

Inefficient detection degrades the observed noise reduction.

Mode Matching

Fields must overlap cleanly

Poor spatial, spectral, or temporal matching reduces effective squeezing.

Technical Noise

Classical noise can dominate

Squeezing helps only when quantum noise is actually the limiting factor.

Bandwidth

Noise depends on frequency

Some systems need frequency-dependent squeezing to improve broadband sensitivity.

Future Outlook

Squeezed light is one of the most practical examples of engineered quantum advantage.

Squeezed light is powerful because it does not require a full universal quantum computer. It uses quantum-state engineering to improve real measurements. That makes it one of the clearest bridges from quantum optics research into deployed quantum technology.

For QCLS, this page strengthens the quantum sensing cluster. The next natural page would be Single-Photon Imaging Explained or Optical Quantum Clocks Explained, depending on whether we want to expand sensing through detectors or through timing and metrology.

Frequently Asked Questions

Squeezed light, explained clearly.

What is squeezed light?

Squeezed light is a nonclassical state of light with reduced quantum uncertainty in one quadrature and increased uncertainty in the conjugate quadrature.

Does squeezed light break the uncertainty principle?

No. It obeys the uncertainty principle by reducing uncertainty in one variable while increasing uncertainty in another.

Why is squeezed light useful?

It can reduce measurement noise in the variable a sensor cares about, improving precision when quantum noise is the limiting factor.

How is squeezed light made?

It is often made through nonlinear optical processes such as optical parametric amplification, four-wave mixing, or optomechanical interactions.

What is squeezed vacuum?

Squeezed vacuum is a vacuum state whose quantum fluctuations have been redistributed so one quadrature is quieter than ordinary vacuum.

What destroys squeezing?

Optical loss, detector inefficiency, phase drift, poor mode matching, and excess technical noise can degrade or erase squeezing.