235 research outputs found
Recoil-induced subradiance in a cold atomic gas
Subradiance, i.e. the cooperative inhibition of spontaneous emission by
destructive interatomic interference, can be realized in a cold atomic sample
confined in a ring cavity and lightened by a two-frequency laser. The atoms,
scattering the photons of the two laser fields into the cavity-mode, recoil and
change their momentum. Under proper conditions the atomic initial momentum
state and the first two momentum recoil states form a three-level degenerate
cascade. A stationary subradiant state is obtained after that the scattered
photons have left the cavity, leaving the atoms in a coherent superposition of
the three collective momentum states. After a semiclassical description of the
process, we calculate the quantum subradiant state and its Wigner function.
Anti-bunching and quantum correlations between the three atomic modes of the
subradiant state are demonstrated
Superradiant light scattering from a moving Bose-Einstein condensate
We investigate the interaction of a moving BEC with a far detuned laser beam.
Superradiant Rayleigh scattering arises from the spontaneous formation of a
matter-wave grating due to the interference of two wavepackets with different
momenta. The system is described by the CARL-BEC model which is a
generalization of the Gross-Pitaevskii model to include the self-consistent
evolution of the scattered field. The experiment gives evidence of a damping of
the matter-wave grating which depends on the initial velocity of the
condensate. We describe this damping in terms of a phase-diffusion decoherence
process, in good agreement with the experimental results
The role of Mie scattering in the seeding of matter-wave superradiance
Matter-wave superradiance is based on the interplay between ultracold atoms
coherently organized in momentum space and a backscattered wave. Here, we show
that this mechanism may be triggered by Mie scattering from the atomic cloud.
We show how the laser light populates the modes of the cloud, and thus imprints
a phase gradient on the excited atomic dipoles. The interference with the atoms
in the ground state results in a grating, that in turn generates coherent
emission, contributing to the backward light wave onset. The atomic recoil
'halos' created by the scattered light exhibit a strong anisotropy, in contrast
to single-atom scattering
Controlled generation of momentum states in a high-finesse ring cavity
A Bose-Einstein condensate in a high-finesse ring cavity scatters the photons
of a pump beam into counterpropagating cavity modes, populating a
bi-dimensional momentum lattice. A high-finesse ring cavity with a sub-recoil
linewidth allows to control the quantized atomic motion, selecting particular
discrete momentum states and generating atom-photon entanglement. The
semiclassical and quantum model for the 2D collective atomic recoil lasing
(CARL) are derived and the superradiant and good-cavity regimes discussed. For
pump incidence perpendicular to the cavity axis, the momentum lattice is
symmetrically populated. Conversely, for oblique pump incidence the motion
along the two recoil directions is unbalanced and different momentum states can
be populated on demand by tuning the pump frequency.Comment: Submitted to EPJ-ST Special Issue. 10 pages and 3 figure
Experimental perspectives for systems based on long-range interactions
The possibility of observing phenomena peculiar to long-range interactions,
and more specifically in the so-called Quasi-Stationary State (QSS) regime is
investigated within the framework of two devices, namely the Free-Electron
Laser (FEL) and the Collective Atomic Recoil Laser (CARL). The QSS dynamics has
been mostly studied using the Hamiltonian Mean-Field (HMF) toy model,
demonstrating in particular the presence of first versus second order phase
transitions from magnetized to unmagnetized regimes in the case of HMF. Here,
we give evidence of the strong connections between the HMF model and the
dynamics of the two mentioned devices, and we discuss the perspectives to
observe some specific QSS features experimentally. In particular, a dynamical
analog of the phase transition is present in the FEL and in the CARL in its
conservative regime. Regarding the dissipative CARL, a formal link is
established with the HMF model. For both FEL and CARL, calculations are
performed with reference to existing experimental devices, namely the
FERMI@Elettra FEL under construction at Sincrotrone Trieste (Italy) and the
CARL system at LENS in Florence (Italy)
Sequential superradiant scattering from atomic Bose-Einstein condensates
We theoretically discuss several aspects of sequential superradiant
scattering from atomic Bose-Einstein condensates. Our treatment is based on the
semiclassical description of the process in terms of the Maxwell-Schroedinger
equations for the coupled matter-wave and optical fields. First, we investigate
sequential scattering in the weak-pulse regime and work out the essential
mechanisms responsible for bringing about the characteristic fan-shaped
side-mode distribution patterns. Second, we discuss the transition between the
Kapitza-Dirac and Bragg regimes of sequential scattering in the strong-pulse
regime. Finally, we consider the situation where superradiance is initiated by
coherently populating an atomic side mode through Bragg diffraction, as in
studies of matter-wave amplification, and describe the effect on the sequential
scattering process.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures. Submitted to Proceedings of LPHYS'06 worksho
"Supersolid" self-bound Bose condensates via laser-induced interatomic forces
We show that the dipole-dipole interatomic forces induced by a single
off-resonant running laser beam can lead to a self-bound pencil-shaped Bose
condensate, even if the laser beam is a plane-wave. For an appropriate laser
intensity the ground state has a quasi-one dimensional density modulation --- a
Bose "supersolid".Comment: 4 pages, 3 eps figure
Controlled Dicke Subradiance from a Large Cloud of Two-Level Systems
Dicke superradiance has been observed in many systems and is based on
constructive interferences between many scattered waves. The counterpart of
this enhanced dynamics, subradiance, is a destructive interference effect
leading to the partial trapping of light in the system. In contrast to the
robust superradiance, subradiant states are fragile and spurious decoherence
phenomena hitherto obstructed the observation of such metastable states. We
show that a dilute cloud of cold atoms is an ideal system to look for
subradiance in free space and study various mechanisms to control this
subradiance.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
The PLASMONX Project for advanced beam physics experiments
The Project PLASMONX is well progressing into its
design phase and has entered as well its second phase of
procurements for main components. The project foresees
the installation at LNF of a Ti:Sa laser system (peak
power > 170 TW), synchronized to the high brightness
electron beam produced by the SPARC photo-injector.
The advancement of the procurement of such a laser
system is reported, as well as the construction plans of a
new building at LNF to host a dedicated laboratory for
high intensity photon beam experiments (High Intensity
Laser Laboratory). Several experiments are foreseen
using this complex facility, mainly in the high gradient
plasma acceleration field and in the field of mono-
chromatic ultra-fast X-ray pulse generation via Thomson
back-scattering. Detailed numerical simulations have
been carried out to study the generation of tightly focused
electron bunches to collide with laser pulses in the
Thomson source: results on the emitted spectra of X-rays
are presented
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