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A 2.5D method for the prediction of structure-borne noise from multi-span concrete rail transit bridges
Dispersive response of atoms trapped near the surface of an optical nanofiber with applications to quantum nondemolition measurement and spin squeezing
We study the strong coupling between photons and atoms that can be achieved
in an optical nanofiber geometry when the interaction is dispersive. While the
Purcell enhancement factor for spontaneous emission into the guided mode does
not reach the strong-coupling regime for individual atoms, one can obtain high
cooperativity for ensembles of a few thousand atoms due to the tight
confinement of the guided modes and constructive interference over the entire
chain of trapped atoms. We calculate the dyadic Green's function, which
determines the scattering of light by atoms in the presence of the fiber, and
thus the phase shift and polarization rotation induced on the guided light by
the trapped atoms. The Green's function is related to a full
Heisenberg-Langevin treatment of the dispersive response of the quantized field
to tensor polarizable atoms. We apply our formalism to quantum nondemolition
(QND) measurement of the atoms via polarimetry. We study shot-noise-limited
detection of atom number for atoms in a completely mixed spin state and the
squeezing of projection noise for atoms in clock states. Compared with
squeezing of atomic ensembles in free space, we capitalize on unique features
that arise in the nanofiber geometry including anisotropy of both the intensity
and polarization of the guided modes. We use a first principles stochastic
master equation to model the squeezing as function of time in the presence of
decoherence due to optical pumping. We find a peak metrological squeezing of ~5
dB is achievable with current technology for ~2500 atoms trapped 180 nm from
the surface of a nanofiber with radius a=225 nm.Comment: To be appeared on PR
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