31 research outputs found
Intensity-intensity correlations as a probe of interferences - under conditions of none in the intensity
The different behaviour of first order interferences and second order
correlations are investigated for the case of two coherently excited atoms. For
intensity measurements this problem is equivalent to Young's double slit
experiment and was investigated in an experiment by Eichmann et al. [Phys. Rev.
Lett. 70, 2359 (1993)] and later analyzed in detail by Itano et al. [Phys. Rev.
A 57, 4176 (1998)]. Our results show that in cases where the intensity
interferences disappear the intensity-intensity correlations can display an
interference pattern with a visibility of up to 100%. The contrast depends on
the polarization selected for the detection and is independent of the strength
of the driving field. The nonclassical nature of the calculated
intensity-intensity correlations is also discussed.Comment: 14 pages, 2 figure
Cooperative fluorescence effects for dipole-dipole interacting systems with experimentally relevant level configurations
The mutual dipole-dipole interaction of atoms in a trap can affect their
fluorescence. Extremely large effects were reported for double jumps between
different intensity periods in experiments with two and three Ba^+ ions for
distances in the range of about ten wave lengths of the strong transition while
no effects were observed for Hg^+ at 15 wave lengths. In this theoretical paper
we study this question for configurations with three and four levels which
model those of Hg^+ and Ba^+, respectively. For two systems in the Hg^+
configuration we find cooperative effects of up to 30% for distances around one
or two wave lengths, about 5% around ten wave lengths, and, for larger
distances in agreement with experiments, practically none. This is similar for
two V systems. However, for two four-level configurations, which model two Ba^+
ions, cooperative effects are practically absent, and this latter result is at
odds with the experimental findings for Ba^+.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, RevTeX4, to be published in Phys. Rev.
Monitoring the Dipole-Dipole Interaction via Quantum Jumps of Individual Atoms
The emission characteristics in the fluorescence of two laser-driven dipole-dipole-interacting three level atoms is investigated. When the light from both atoms is detected separately a correlation of the emission processes is observed in dependence of the dipole-dipole interaction. This opens the possibility to investigate the dipole-dipole interaction through the emission behavior. We present Monte-Carlo simulations which are in good agreement with the analytic solutions
Inhibition of cooperative quantum jumps due to fast spontaneous decay
A Quantum Monte Carlo wave function approach is used to rule out the possibility of cooperative effects in the quantum jump statistics of adjacent three-level ions of the type discussed in a series of experiments and theoretical investigations. By deriving analytical results and examining quantum jumps in various subspaces, we track this outcome to the fact that a fast spontaneous decay inhibits dipole-dipole-induced entanglement between the ions developing on a much slower time scale. This inhibition is demonstrated even for weak pumping of the fast transition. The Quantum Monte Carlo calculation thus sheds new light on the controversy arising from the findings of two recent conflicting experiments by Block et al. (Eur. Phys. J. D, 7 (1999) 461) and Donald et al. (Europhys. Lett., 51 (2000) 388)
The intensity correlation function of "blinking" quantum systems
Explicit expressions are determined for the photon correlation function of
``blinking'' quantum systems, i.e. systems with different types of fluorescent
periods. These expressions can be used for a fit to experimental data and for
obtaining system parameters therefrom. For two dipole-dipole interacting
systems the dependence on the dipole coupling constant is explicitly given and
shown to be particularly pronounced if the strong driving is reduced. We
propose to use this for an experimental verification of the dipole-dipole
interaction.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures, uses iopams.st
Polarization-correlated photon pairs from a single ion
In the fluorescence light of a single atom, the probability for emission of a
photon with certain polarization depends on the polarization of the photon
emitted immediately before it. Here correlations of such kind are investigated
with a single trapped calcium ion by means of second order correlation
functions. A theoretical model is developed and fitted to the experimental
data, which show 91% probability for the emission of polarization-correlated
photon pairs within 24 ns.Comment: 8 pages, 9 figure
Nonclassical Interference Effects In The Radiation From Coherently Driven Uncorrelated Atoms
We demonstrate the existence of new nonclassical correlations in the
radiation of two atoms, which are coherently driven by a continuous laser
source. The photon-photon-correlations of the fluorescence light show a spatial
interferene pattern not present in a classical treatment. A feature of the new
phenomenon is, that bunched and antibunched light is emitted in different
spatial directions. The calculations are performed analytically. It is pointed
out, that the correlations are induced by state reduction due to the
measurement process when the detection of the photons does not distinguish
between the atoms. It is interesting to note, that the phenomena show up even
without any interatomic interaction.Comment: 4 pages, 6 Figure
Quantum Coherence in a Single Ion due to strong Excitation of a metastable Transition
We consider pump-probe spectroscopy of a single ion with a highly metastable
(probe) clock transition which is monitored by using the quantum jump
technique. For a weak clock laser we obtain the well known Autler-Townes
splitting. For stronger powers of the clock laser we demonstrate the transition
to a new regime. The two regimes are distinguished by the transition of two
complex eigenvalues to purely imaginary ones which can be very different in
magnitude. The transition is controlled by the power of the clock laser. For
pump on resonance we present simple analytical expressions for various
linewidths and line positions.Comment: 6 figures. accepted for publication in PR
Quantitative conditional quantum erasure in two-atom resonance fluorescence
We present a conditional quantum eraser which erases the a priori knowledge
or the predictability of the path a photon takes in a Young-type double-slit
experiment with two fluorescent four-level atoms. This erasure violates a
recently derived erasure relation which must be satisfied for a conventional,
unconditional quantum eraser that aims to find an optimal sorting of the system
into subensembles with particularly large fringe visibilities. The conditional
quantum eraser employs an interaction-free, partial which-way measurement which
not only sorts the system into optimal subsystems with large visibility but
also selects the appropriate subsystem with the maximum possible visibility. We
explain how the erasure relation can be violated under these circumstances.Comment: Revtex4, 12pages, 4 eps figures, replaced with published version,
changes in Sec. 3, to appear in Physical Review
Resonant dipole-dipole interaction in the presence of dispersing and absorbing surroundings
Within the framework of quantization of the macroscopic electromagnetic
field, equations of motion and an effective Hamiltonian for treating both the
resonant dipole-dipole interaction between two-level atoms and the resonant
atom-field interaction are derived, which can suitably be used for studying the
influence of arbitrary dispersing and absorbing material surroundings on these
interactions. The theory is applied to the study of the transient behavior of
two atoms that initially share a single excitation, with special emphasis on
the role of the two competing processes of virtual and real photon exchange in
the energy transfer between the atoms. In particular, it is shown that for weak
atom-field interaction there is a time window, where the energy transfer
follows a rate regime of the type obtained by ordinary second-order
perturbation theory. Finally, the resonant dipole-dipole interaction is shown
to give rise to a doublet spectrum of the emitted light for weak atom-field
interaction and a triplet spectrum for strong atom-field interaction.Comment: 15 pages, 1 figure, RevTE