论文标题
通过纳米纤维界面对原子状态的复合皮秒控制
Composite picosecond control of atomic state through a nanofiber interface
论文作者
论文摘要
原子是理想的量子传感器和量子光发射器。与纳米光器件的接口原子有望进行新颖的纳米级传感和量子光学功能。但是,这些设备中原子状态的精确光控制受到纳米光子通用的空间变化的光原子耦合强度的挑战。 We demonstrate numerically that despite the inhomogenuity, composite picosecond optical pulses with optimally tailored phases are able to evanescently control the atomic electric dipole transitions nearly perfectly, with $f>99\%$ fidelity across large enough volumes for {\it e.g.} controlling cold atoms confined in near-field optical lattices.我们的建议之后是原则证明,并带有$^{85} $ rb蒸气 - 光学纳米纤维界面,其中激发$ n = 3 $ n = 3 $引导的picsecond d1 Control降低了共同参与的纳米Ececond D2 D2探测的吸收。通过将参数空间中的吸收数据与介观原子蒸气响应的第一原则建模进行比较,可以证实近乎理想的性能。将复合技术扩展到$ n \ geq 5 $似乎是高度可行的,可以用精确的精度支持对原子偶极子的任意局部控制。这种前所未有的能力将允许使用误差原子光谱,并使用原子纳米光子界面打开新的非线性量子光学研究。
Atoms are ideal quantum sensors and quantum light emitters. Interfacing atoms with nanophotonic devices promises novel nanoscale sensing and quantum optical functionalities. But precise optical control of atomic states in these devices is challenged by the spatially varying light-atom coupling strength, generic to nanophotonic. We demonstrate numerically that despite the inhomogenuity, composite picosecond optical pulses with optimally tailored phases are able to evanescently control the atomic electric dipole transitions nearly perfectly, with $f>99\%$ fidelity across large enough volumes for {\it e.g.} controlling cold atoms confined in near-field optical lattices. Our proposal is followed by a proof-of-principle demonstration with a $^{85}$Rb vapor -- optical nanofiber interface, where the excitation by an $N=3$ sequence of guided picosecond D1 control reduces the absorption of a co-guided nanosecond D2 probe by up to $\sim70\%$. The close-to-ideal performance is corroborated by comparing the absorption data across the parameter space with first-principle modeling of the mesoscopic atomic vapor response. Extension of the composite technique to $N\geq 5$ appears highly feasible to support arbitrary local control of atomic dipoles with exquisite precision. This unprecedented ability would allow error-resilient atomic spectroscopy and open up novel nonlinear quantum optical research with atom-nanophotonic interfaces.