论文标题
热原子蒸气中光的副液
Paraxial fluid of light in hot atomic vapors
论文作者
论文摘要
光的量子流体是玻色气体的光子对应物。他们目前引起了越来越多的兴趣,因为它们是用途广泛且高度可调的系统,用于探测多体物理量子现象,例如超流体。已经报道了微流体流动的超流体流动性激元孔孔冷凝水,但是在无蛀牙系统中清楚地观察了这种现象,即用于传播光子流体仍然难以捉摸。在本论文中,我们研究了在热rubidium蒸气中传播光的光动力学特性。尽管空气中的光子没有相互相互作用,但rubidium蒸气中的情况是不同的,但由于原子合奏介导的有效相互作用,但出现了它们之间的有效相互作用。因此,光是在垂直于光轴的平面中流动的流体。本文的主要目的是表明这些系统中的光可以作为超流体。迈向超级流体观察的第一步是测量传播到传播光子流体的小振幅密度波的分散关系。我表明,这种色散表现出小型激发波矢量的线性趋势,根据Landau标准,这是保证超流体的足够条件。然后,我提出了一个全光缺陷实验 - 其中光子流体反向光学诱导的障碍物(即,折射率的局部变化) - 旨在测量在流体/超流体阈值下取消阻力的拖曳力。
Quantum fluids of light are the photonic counterpart of Bose gases. They currently attract increasing interest since they are versatile and highly tunable systems for probing many-body physics quantum phenomena, such as superfluidity. Superfluid flow of light has already been reported in microcavity exciton-polariton condensates but clear observation of this phenomenon in cavityless systems, that is, for propagating photon fluids, remains elusive. In this thesis, we study the hydrodynamical properties of light propagating close to resonance in hot rubidium vapors. Whereas photons in air are not interacting with each other, the situation is different in rubidium vapors, as an effective interaction between them, mediated by the atomic ensemble, appears. The light behaves therefore as a fluid flowing in the plane perpendicular to the optical axis. The primary purpose of this thesis was to show that light in those systems can behave as a superfluid. The first step toward the observation of superfluidity is to measure the dispersion relation of small amplitude density waves travelling onto the propagating photon fluid. I show that this dispersion exhibits a linear trend for small excitation wave-vectors, which is, according to the Landau criterion, a sufficient condition for guaranteeing superfluidity. I present then an all-optical defect experiment - where the photon fluid flows against an optically induced obstacle (namely, a local change of refractive index) - designed to measure the drag force cancellation at the fluid/superfluid threshold.