64 research outputs found

    Dynamical polarizability of atoms in arbitrary light fields: general theory and application to cesium

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    We present a systematic derivation of the dynamical polarizability and the ac Stark shift of the ground and excited states of atoms interacting with a far-off-resonance light field of arbitrary polarization. We calculate the scalar, vector, and tensor polarizabilities of atomic cesium using resonance wavelengths and reduced matrix elements for a large number of transitions. We analyze the properties of the fictitious magnetic field produced by the vector polarizability in conjunction with the ellipticity of the polarization of the light field.Comment: see also Supplemental Materia

    Fiber-optical switch controlled by a single atom

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    We demonstrate highly efficient switching of optical signals between two optical fibers controlled by a single atom. The key element of our experiment is a whispering-gallery mode bottle microresonator, which is coupled to a single atom and interfaced by two tapered fiber couplers. Even in the presence of the coupling fibers, the atom--resonator system reaches the strong coupling regime of cavity quantum electrodynamics (CQED), leading to a vacuum Rabi splitting in the excitation spectrum. We systematically investigate the switching efficiency of our system, i.e., the probability that the CQED fiber-optical switch redirects the light into the desired output. We obtain a large redirection efficiency reaching a raw fidelity of more than 60% without post-selection.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure

    Heating in Nanophotonic Traps for Cold Atoms

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    Laser-cooled atoms that are trapped and optically interfaced with light in nanophotonic waveguides are a powerful platform for fundamental research in quantum optics as well as for applications in quantum communication and quantum information processing. Ever since the first realization of such a hybrid quantum nanophotonic, heating rates of the atomic motion observed in various experimental settings have typically been exceeding those in comparable free-space optical microtraps by about three orders of magnitude. This excessive heating is a roadblock for the implementation of certain protocols and devices. Its origin has so far remained elusive and, at the typical atom-surface separations of less than an optical wavelength encountered in nanophotonic traps, numerous effects may potentially contribute to atom heating. Here, we theoretically describe the effect of mechanical vibrations of waveguides on guided light fields and provide a general theory of particle-phonon interaction in nanophotonic traps. We test our theory by applying it to the case of laser-cooled cesium atoms in nanofiber-based two-color optical traps. We find excellent quantitative agreement between the predicted heating rates and experimentally measured values. Our theory predicts that, in this setting, the dominant heating process stems from the optomechanical coupling of the optically trapped atoms to the continuum of thermally occupied flexural mechanical modes of the waveguide structure. Beyond unraveling the long-standing riddle of excessive heating in nanofiber-based atom traps, we also study the dependence of the heating rates on the relevant system parameters. Our findings allow us to propose several strategies for minimizing the heating. Finally, our findings are also highly relevant for optomechanics experiments with dielectric nanoparticles that are optically trapped close to nanophotonic waveguides.Comment: Published version. 35 pages (including appendices), 7 figures, 18 tables, and 3 pages of supplemental materia
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