1,748 research outputs found
Quantum Optics with Atomic Ensembles and Single Atoms in Cavities
Current experiments in our group explore the quantum interface between matter and light, with the goal of achieving coherent control for implementing quantum information protocols and quantum networks. We outline recent progress in this direction, including localization to the ground state of motion for an atom trapped in an optical cavity, observation of strong coupling between single Cesium atoms and a monolithic resonator, and generation and characterization of entanglement stored in remote atomic ensembles
Cavity QED with Single Atoms and Photons
Recent experimental advances in the field of cavity quantum electrodynamics (QED) have opened new possibilities for control of atom-photon interactions. A laser with "one and the same atom" demonstrates the theory of laser operation pressed to its conceptual limit. The generation of single photons on demand and the realization of cavity QED with well defined atomic numbers N = 0, 1, 2,... both represent important steps toward realizing diverse protocols in quantum information science. Coherent manipulation of the atomic state via Raman transitions provides a new tool in cavity QED for in situ monitoring and control of the atom-cavity system. All of these achievements share a common point of departure: the regime of strong coupling. It is thus interesting to consider briefly the history of the strong coupling criterion in cavity QED and to trace out the path that research has taken in the pursuit of this goal
The Role of Grass Tussocks in Maintaining Soil Condition in North East Australia
Soils of the grazing lands of north eastern Australia are inherently nutrient-poor. Heterogeneously distributed plants are important to the conservation of the limited amounts of nutrients, through storage in plant tissues or in soil sinks close to plants (Ludwig et al., 1997). Loss of perennial vegetation through disturbance reduces conservation of these resources, to the detriment of feedback mechanisms, and ultimately causes loss of soil condition. Large areas of north east Australia have been degraded, or threatened by degradation, through combinations of variability in precipitation and heavy grazing (Gardener et al., 1990). This study examined the inter-related responses of plants, soil microbes and soil nutrients to management-related disturbance
Trapped atoms in cavity QED: coupling quantized light and matter
On the occasion of the hundredth anniversary of Albert Einstein's annus mirabilis, we reflect on the development and current state of research in cavity quantum electrodynamics in the optical domain. Cavity QED is a field which undeniably traces its origins to Einstein's seminal work on the statistical theory of light and the nature of its quantized interaction with matter. In this paper, we emphasize the development of techniques for the confinement of atoms strongly coupled to high-finesse resonators and the experiments which these techniques enable
A deterministic cavity-QED source of polarization entangled photon pairs
We present two cavity quantum electrodynamics proposals that, sharing the
same basic elements, allow for the deterministic generation of entangled
photons pairs by means of a three-level atom successively coupled to two single
longitudinal mode high-Q optical resonators presenting polarization degeneracy.
In the faster proposal, the three-level atom yields a polarization entangled
photon pair via two truncated Rabi oscillations, whereas in the adiabatic
proposal a counterintuitive Stimulated Raman Adiabatic Passage process is
considered. Although slower than the former process, this second method is very
efficient and robust under fluctuations of the experimental parameters and,
particularly interesting, almost completely insensitive to atomic decay.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Cooling to the Ground State of Axial Motion for One Atom Strongly Coupled to an Optical Cavity
Localization to the ground state of axial motion is demonstrated for a
single, trapped atom strongly coupled to the field of a high finesse optical
resonator. The axial atomic motion is cooled by way of coherent Raman
transitions on the red vibrational sideband. An efficient state detection
scheme enabled by strong coupling in cavity QED is used to record the Raman
spectrum, from which the state of atomic motion is inferred. We find that the
lowest vibrational level of the axial potential with zero-point energy 13uK is
occupied with probability P0~0.95.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
A Massive Chert Bed in the Hopkinton Formation and an Associated Boulder Train Near Strawberry Point, Clayton County, Iowa
Feulner, while mapping the bedrock of Clayton county during the summer of 1951, observed numerous large chert erratics scattered over the landscape west of Strawberry Point. These erratics lie near the edge of the Iowan drift plain just south of the northfacing Niagaran escarpment, which is formed by the erosion of Silurian rocks
Optical pumping via incoherent Raman transitions
A new optical pumping scheme is presented that uses incoherent Raman
transitions to prepare a trapped Cesium atom in a specific Zeeman state within
the 6S_{1/2}, F=3 hyperfine manifold. An important advantage of this scheme
over existing optical pumping schemes is that the atom can be prepared in any
of the F=3 Zeeman states. We demonstrate the scheme in the context of cavity
quantum electrodynamics, but the technique is equally applicable to a wide
variety of atomic systems with hyperfine ground-state structure.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figure
Simulating Quantum Fields with Cavity QED
As the realization of a fully operational quantum computer remains distant,
quantum simulation, whereby one quantum system is engineered to simulate
another, becomes a key goal of great practical importance. Here we report on a
variational method exploiting the natural physics of cavity QED architectures
to simulate strongly interacting quantum fields. Our scheme is broadly
applicable to any architecture involving tunable and strongly nonlinear
interactions with light; as an example, we demonstrate that existing cavity
devices could simulate models of strongly interacting bosons. The scheme can be
extended to simulate systems of entangled multicomponent fields, beyond the
reach of existing classical simulation methods.Comment: 4+3 pages, 2 figures, published versio
Deterministic single-photon source from a single ion
We realize a deterministic single-photon source from one and the same calcium
ion interacting with a high-finesse optical cavity. Photons are created in the
cavity with efficiency (88 +- 17)%, a tenfold improvement over previous
cavity-ion sources. Results of the second-order correlation function are
presented, demonstrating a high suppression of two-photon events limited only
by background counts. The cavity photon pulse shape is obtained, with good
agreement between experiment and simulation. Moreover, theoretical analysis of
the temporal evolution of the atomic populations provides relevant information
about the dynamics of the process and opens the way to future investigations of
a coherent atom-photon interface
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