Higher-order photon statistics in SPDC
We measure spectrally resolved higher-order photon statistics with a four-detector HBT coupled to a spectrometer, revealing wavelength-dependent generation efficiencies and non-Poissonian behavior.
We study quantum light, plasmonics, and nanostructures. This site collects our research, publications, and teaching materials.
The Thomay Lab explores the interaction of light and matter at the quantum level. We study photon statistics, plasmonic nanostructures, and nonlinear optical phenomena to develop new tools for quantum information, sensing, and materials characterization.
Our group combines tabletop quantum optics with fiber-integrated devices, advanced spectroscopy, and computational methods — bridging fundamental quantum physics and practical photonic technologies.
Our lab builds advanced quantum light sources and measurement tools to push fundamental and applied frontiers— from photon-number–resolved quantum optics and foundational tests, to fiber-integrated nonlinear optics and AI-assisted quantum sensing with impact in the physical and life sciences. We particularly develop and use higher-order Fock states for precision metrology, communication, and computation.
We measure spectrally resolved higher-order photon statistics with a four-detector HBT coupled to a spectrometer, revealing wavelength-dependent generation efficiencies and non-Poissonian behavior.
A monolayer TMD on a fiber tip inside a mode-locked Yb fiber laser generates stable second-harmonic light without disrupting mode-locking—an all-fiber route to compact frequency conversion.
Introducing quantum emitters into leaves and analyzing higher-order correlations with a CNN, we classify photosynthetic states and link quantum signals to plant health under different growth conditions.
A discrete, event-centric framework reproduces spin-rotation probabilities and extends to photon-number experiments, suggesting tabletop tests of foundational models.
For a full list of publications, visit Dr. Thomay’s ORCID profile.
Dr. Thomay regularly teaches and develops courses in computational and experimental physics, emphasizing open, reproducible workflows using Python, data visualization, and simulation methods. Resources and materials for these courses are openly available through the UB-SUNY GitHub organization.
Department, University at Buffalo
Buffalo, NY, USA
Email: thomay [at] buffalo [dot] edu