75 research outputs found
Coherent responses of resonance atom layer to short optical pulse excitation
Coherent responses of resonance atom layer to short optical pulse excitation
are numerically considered. The inhomogeneous broadening of one-photon
transition, the local field effect, and the substrate dispersion are involved
into analysis. For a certain intensity of incident pulses a strong coherent
interaction in the form of sharp spikes of superradiation is observed in
transmitted radiation. The Lorentz field correction and the substrate
dispersion weaken the effect, providing additional spectral shifts. Specific
features of photon echo in the form of multiple responses to a double or triple
pulse excitation is discussed.Comment: only PDF,15 page
Excitonic effects on the two-color coherent control of interband transitions in bulk semiconductors
Quantum interference between one- and two-photon absorption pathways allows
coherent control of interband transitions in unbiased bulk semiconductors;
carrier population, carrier spin polarization, photocurrent injection, and spin
current injection may all be controlled. We extend the theory of these
processes to include the electron-hole interaction. Our focus is on photon
energies that excite carriers above the band edge, but close enough to it so
that transition amplitudes based on low order expansions in are
applicable; both allowed-allowed and allowed-forbidden two-photon transition
amplitudes are included. Analytic solutions are obtained using the effective
mass theory of Wannier excitons; degenerate bands are accounted for, but
envelope-hole coupling is neglected. We find a Coulomb enhancement of two-color
coherent control process, and relate it to the Coulomb enhancements of one- and
two-photon absorption. In addition, we find a frequency dependent phase shift
in the dependence of photocurrent and spin current on the optical phases. The
phase shift decreases monotonically from at the band edge to 0 over an
energy range governed by the exciton binding energy. It is the difference
between the partial wave phase shifts of the electron-hole envelope function
reached by one- and two-photon pathways.Comment: 31 pages, 4 figures, to be published in Phys. Rev.
Coherent Control of Atomic Beam Diffraction by Standing Light
Quantum interference is shown to deliver a means of regulating the
diffraction pattern of a thermal atomic beam interacting with two standing wave
electric fields. Parameters have been identified to enhance the diffraction
probability of one momentum component over the others, with specific
application to Rb atoms.Comment: 5 figure
Steady state of atoms in a resonant field with elliptical polarization
We present a complete set of analytical and invariant expressions for the
steady-state density matrix of atoms in a resonant radiation field with
arbitrary intensity and polarization. The field drives the closed dipole
transition with arbitrary values of the angular momenta and of
the ground and excited state. The steady-state density matrix is expressed in
terms of spherical harmonics of a complex direction given by the field
polarization vector. The generalization to the case of broad-band radiation is
given. We indicate various applications of these results.Comment: revtex, 26 pages, including 3 eps figures; PRA accepted for
publication;v2 three typos are fixe
On the Theory of Vibronic Superradiance
The Dicke superradiance on vibronic transitions of impurity crystals is
considered. It is shown that parameters of the superradiance (duration and
intensity of the superradiance pulse and delay times) on each vibronic
transition depend on the strength of coupling of electronic states with the
intramolecular impurity vibration (responsible for the vibronic structure of
the optical spectrum in the form of vibrational replicas of the pure electronic
line) and on the crystal temperature through the Debye-Waller factor of the
lattice vibrations. Theoretical estimates of the ratios of the time delays, as
well as of the superradiance pulse intensities for different vibronic
transitions well agree with the results of experimental observations of
two-color superradiance in the polar dielectric KCl:O2-. In addition, the
theory describes qualitatively correctly the critical temperature dependence of
the superradiance effect.Comment: 8 pages, 1 figur
- …