Polarization-dependent sensitivity of level-crossing, coherent-population-trapping resonances to stray magnetic fields

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Polarization-dependent sensitivity of level-crossing, coherent-population-trapping resonances to stray magnetic fields"

Transcription

1 Huss et al. Vol. 23, No. 9/September 2006/ J. Opt. Soc. Am. B 1729 Polarization-dependent sensitivity of level-crossing, coherent-population-trapping resonances to stray magnetic fields Arno Huss, Roland Lammegger, and Laurentius Windholz Institute of Experimental Physics, Technical University of Graz, Petersgasse 16, Graz 8010, Austria Emilia Alipieva, Sanka Gateva, Lubomir Petrov, Elena Taskova, and Georgy Todorov Institute of Electronics, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Tzarigradsko Chaussee 72, Sofia 1784, Bulgaria Received January 6, 2006; revised May 8, 2006; accepted May 8, 2006; posted May 18, 2006 (Doc. ID 67052) Coherent-population-trapping resonances within the degenerate two-level system of the F=2 F =1 transition of the 87 Rb D 1 line were investigated in an uncoated Rb vapor cell by means of level-crossing-type experiments. Tuning over the two-photon resonance is achieved sweeping a magnetic field around zero value. The influence of transverse magnetic fields on the amplitude and the width of the resonances, recorded in fluorescence and absorption, were investigated in the cases of excitation with linear, circular, and elliptical laser light polarization. A theoretical analysis was performed for the case of linearly polarized excitation, the results of which are in good agreement with the experiment Optical Society of America OCIS codes: , , INTRODUCTION Coherent-population-trapping (CPT) resonances arise in a three-level atomic system ( system) as a result of destructive quantum interference of two resonantly excited transitions. 1 Owing to very interesting opportunities for application, the CPT resonance has recently been widely investigated. Usually, two ground levels are coupled to a common excited state by means of two coherent laser fields. When the frequency difference of the two coupling laser fields equals the frequency separation between the two ground levels (two-photon resonance), the atoms are prepared in the nonabsorbing dark state. Detecting the fluorescence light emitted by the atoms, CPT is observed experimentally as a narrow-width dip (possibly orders of magnitude narrower than the natural line width of the transition) when the frequency of one of the coherent fields is scanned. A CPT resonance can also be observed in single-frequency excitation in the so-called Hanle configuration. 1,2 Here, the Zeeman sublevels of a single hyperfine level are excited by the + and components of linearly polarized laser light, with the polarization direction orthogonal to the quantization axis given by the scanned magnetic field (MF). In this case, instead of tuning the laser frequency, the CPT resonance is detected via scanning the MF and changing the energy of the Zeeman sublevels. At zero MF (level crossing), the two-photon resonance is satisfied and the resonance is observed. Magneto-optical effects are playing a major role in the field of magnetometry. Very high resolution (1 ft Hz 1/2 ) has been reached in nonlinear magneto-optical rotation (NMOR) experiments 3 or with optical pumping magnetometer (OPM) devices. 4 6 Recently, an optically pumped magnetometer was applied successfully to measuring the weak cardiomagnetic field. 7 However, the interest in new MF detection systems based on magneto-optical effects continues to be strong, the CPT-based magnetometer being a promising candidate. In a MF, the CPT resonance, obtained by two laser fields on two different hyperfine transitions within the hyperfine structure of alkali metal atoms, splits into several components owing to the Zeeman effect. The relative position of these components are used for MF measurements. 8 Another method used for MF measurements is based on excitation of a single hyperfine transition with laser light, which is additionally modulated in the kilohertz band. 9 In this particular case, the condition for CPT is satisfied if the modulation frequency matches the frequency difference between two of the split hyperfine sublevels. A change in the registered fluorescence signal is therefore observable. The single-frequency level crossing CPT resonances do not split in an external MF, because for each couple of Zeeman sublevels the resonance condition is fulfilled only at a zero MF level. This resonance phenomenon is well known also as the groundstate Hanle effect. 1 As this CPT, resonances are created by the coupling of Zeeman sublevel pairs; any external MF influences the amplitude, width, and shape of the observed signal. Although this effect is well known, it has not been studied systematically for this case. Generally, the CPT resonances can be detected either as a decrease of the fluorescence intensity, or as an enhancement of the transmitted intensity. In the latter case, the transmission properties of the coherently excited medium are mainly determined by the electromagnetic field parameters; thus, the effect is called electromagnetically induced transparency (EIT). 10 In this paper, we report studies on both the fluorescence (CPT) and the transmitted (EIT) intensity signals, in or /06/ /$ Optical Society of America

2 1730 J. Opt. Soc. Am. B/ Vol. 23, No. 9/ September 2006 Huss et al. der to explore the possibilities for applying Hanle-type CPT resonances to MF measurements. In this work, we investigate the width and contrast of single-frequency level-crossing CPT resonances in the presence of an additional probe MF orthogonal to the laser propagation direction, applying linearly, circularly, or elliptically polarized light. All measurements were performed on the 5 2 S 1/2 5 2 P 1/2 transition F=2 F =1 of the 87 Rb D 1 line. The theoretical description of the transverse MF on the CPT resonances in the case of linearly polarized excitation is in good qualitative agreement with the corresponding experimental results. 2. EXPERIMENTAL SETUP The experimental setup is shown in Fig. 1. An extendedcavity diode laser is frequency stabilized to the F=2 F =1 87 Rb D 1 transition at a 795 nm wavelength by a dichroic atomic vapor laser lock (DAVLL) setup. 11 A part of the laser light is split off and sent through a 87 Rb vapor cell. The cell is mounted inside a solenoid that creates a MF B 0 up to 170 G oriented parallel to the laser beam propagation direction. The current driving the solenoid additionally enables us to heat up the cell to 40 C, which increases the vapor pressure and therefore the absorption signal. The linearly polarized beam excites. + and transitions, which show their maximum absorption at different laser frequencies owing to the energy shift of the Zeeman sublevels in the MF (magnetically induced dichroism). A quarter-wave plate after the absorption cell transforms the two circularly polarized components of the laser beam into two linearly polarized beams (orthogonal to each other) that are separated by a polarizing beam splitter and detected independently by two fast photodiodes. The difference between these photodiode signals is a dispersive shaped signal, suitable for laser stabilization purposes via a fast proportional integral differential (PID) servo unit (see Fig. 1). The laser mode spectrum is additionally observed and controlled by an optical spectrum analyzer. A part of the laser light (about 100 W; a laser beam expanded to a diameter of about 1.5 cm) passes through an uncoated 87 Rb vacuum cell kept at room temperature. The cell is placed inside a solenoid, through Fig. 1. Experimental setup. OSC, oscilloscope; PD, photodiode; FPI, Fabry Perot etalon; m, lambda meter; BS, beam splitter; FG, triangle wave-frequency generator, /4 quarter-wave plate; PBS, polarizing beam splitter; B 0, static MF. Fig. 2. CPT (dots) and EIT (curve) resonances obtained on 5 2 S 1/2-5 2 P 87 1/2 Rb F g =2 F e =1 transition. I las =57 W/cm 2 (laser beam diameter 1.5 cm); compensated laboratory MF. which a current is driven by a triangular wave frequency generator to produce a MF scanned around zero value. The transmitted beam is detected by a photodiode, and the CPT signal is registered by a digital data storage oscilloscope, which is read out by a personal computer. The fluorescence light is detected by a second photodiode, directly mounted on the sidewall of the vapor cell. This signal is observed on the same oscilloscope. Thus the CPT resonance signals recorded in fluorescence and transmission are directly comparable. To investigate the influence of probe MFs on the amplitude and width of the CPT resonance signals, the 87 Rb vapor cell is placed inside three pairs of mutually orthogonal Helmholtz coils, each of them wired twofold. The Earth s MF is thus compensated for, and additional probe MFs are applied. 3. EXPERIMENTAL RESULTS A. Excitation with Linearly Polarized Light The dependence of the fluorescence and the transmitted intensity on the scanned magnetic field B scan is shown to be Lorentzian for an expanded laser beam and low laser power density up to a few mw/cm 2 (Refs. 12 and 13). The experimental signal for CPT and EIT resonances obtained with a laser power density of 57 W/cm 2 and a laser beam diameter of 1.5 cm is shown in Fig. 2. The relaxation processes in the Rb cell mainly determine the CPT resonance width. At room temperature, the Rb vapor pressure is about Pa, and collisions do not play a significant role. The decay rate of the grounds-state coherence is very low, so that its effective lifetime is determined by the laser power broadening and the transit time of the atoms crossing the laser beam diameter. When scanning the field B scan without any additional field B add applied perpendicular to B scan, a FWHM of the CPT resonance of 0 =40 mg was measured, which for the D 1 line of 87 Rb corresponds to =28 khz. For the experimental conditions T=300 K, the laser beam diameter was 1.5 cm, the estimated time-of-flight broadening was 10 khz, and the power broadening was approximately 30 khz. The power broadening was calculated using the formula obtained by Javan et al. 14 for low laser intensity.

3 Huss et al. Vol. 23, No. 9/September 2006/J. Opt. Soc. Am. B 1731 The presence of a stray MF changes the Zeeman splitting and disturbs the coherence created after laser atom interaction. To investigate this effect on the shape and width of the CPT resonance, we applied additional MFs B add in two orthogonal directions (parallel and perpendicular to the vector of the laser polarization E las ). These spatial directions were chosen in our investigations because, for these directions, the shape of the resonance signal is preserved. Fig. 5. (Color online) Excitation scheme for level-crossing CPT resonances polarization parallel to the MF B add. The relative transition probabilities are quoted in the insets. Fig. 6. Amplitude and width of the CPT resonances in dependence on B add (parallel to the laser polarization). Fig. 3. (Color online) Excitation scheme for level-crossing CPT resonances. Polarization perpendicular to the MF B add. Fig. 4. Amplitude and width of the CPT resonances in dependence on B add (perpendicular to the laser polarization E las ); squares, fluorescence signal; circles, transmission signal; line- Lorentzian fit. 1. Magnetic Field Perpendicular to the Laser Polarization The experimental geometry and the level scheme used for the level-crossing CPT resonance investigations are presented in Fig. 3. The linearly polarized laser light connects all Zeeman sublevels of the F=2 F =1 transition to schemes via simultaneous + and excitation (quantization axis parallel to B scan ). At zero MF, the atoms are prepared in a nonabsorbing state; as a result the fluorescence intensity is reduced. The MF B scan scanned along the laser beam propagation axis splits the Zeeman sublevels and destroys the coherence. The atoms can interact with the resonant light again, so the fluorescence intensity increases. The same results are obtained by choosing the quantization axes parallel to E las (see Fig. 3), because this kind of excitation creates a longitudinal alignment only. B scan as well as B add are both destroying this alignment. The result is again an increased fluorescence intensity. The dependencies of the CPT signal amplitude and width on the value of the additional MF B add are presented in Fig. 4. The resonances measured in fluorescence and transmission show the same shape and width. The signal amplitude is taken at B scan =0 mg. The CPT signal amplitude in dependence on the MF B add behaves like a Lorentzian function. MFs of the order of mg destroy the ground-state coherence, and a CPT resonance is no longer observed. The MF B add increases the width of the resonance in a nonlinear manner. 2. Magnetic Field Parallel to the Laser Polarization The experimental geometry and the corresponding level scheme valid for this case are presented in Fig. 5. The dependencies of the CPT resonances amplitude and width on the value of the additional MF parallel to the laser polarization E las are shown in Fig. 6. As in the previous case, the CPT amplitude dependence on B add has a Lorentzian shape (but with opposite sign). The additional MF in this direction increases the resonance amplitude. The resonance width dependence on B add can be approximated as being linear at a rate [0.98(2) G/G] for fields stronger than 1 2 0, i.e., mg. In this configuration, the increasing additional MF destroys the coherence more slowly, and a resonance can be recorded in a wide region, until MFs corresponding to (i.e., G) are applied. A qualitative explanation of the dependence observed can be given considering the atomic

4 1732 J. Opt. Soc. Am. B/ Vol. 23, No. 9/ September 2006 Huss et al. Fig. 7. (Color online) Excitation scheme for level-crossing MF resonances in case of circular polarization. system in the vicinity of the zero value of the scanned MF (Fig. 5). If we choose a quantization axis directed along the laser field polarization E las, the laser-atom interaction creates transitions m F =0. Through the spontaneous emission, atoms are pumped into the states m F = +2 and m F = 2. This process is very effective, because the relative transition probabilities are the largest for these transitions. The MF B add together with the scanned MF B scan cause a redistribution of these populations and, moreover, they influence the optical coherence. As a result, the fluorescence and transmission signals are enhanced (Fig. 6). A more detailed consideration for the case of excitation with linearly polarized laser light, based on numerical solution of the system of density matrix equations, is presented in Section 4. B. Excitation with Circularly Polarized Light In the case of B add =0, no systems are formed in the excitation scheme of Fig. 7, and thus the conditions for CPT are not fulfilled. Thus in case of exact circular polarization, there is no quantum interference effect at all and, intuitively, the intensity of the fluorescence signal must not show any sharp dependence on the MF B scan. However, around the zero MF a distinct bright level-crossing MF resonance due to optical pumping is observed. This resonance shows a strong dependence on the additional probe MF B add. The circularly polarized laser beam excites, e.g., + transitions and pumps the atoms into two of the ground-state hyperfine sublevels (Fig. 7). The atomic magnetic momentum created due to the atom-laser interaction is directed collinearly to the MF B scan and does not destroy the orientation of the atoms. The signal obtained is due entirely to an uncompensated MF in transverse direction, which mixes the ground-state sublevels and causes redistribution of the ground-states population, 15,16 providing evidence of the magnetic momentum created by the laser field. A precise compensation of the MF B add cancels this signal. The dependence of the resonance amplitude and width on the additional MF B add is depicted in Fig. 8. Again the resonance amplitude dependence on the transverse MF has a Lorentzian shape. As in Subsection 3.A.2, a redistribution of the ground-state population in m F =1,2 (Fig. 7), caused by the transverse field, increases the amplitude of the resonance. The dependence of the resonance width on the additional MF B add shows a linear dependence with a slope of mg/mg. Such linear behavior is easily applicable for magnetometry, as it allows measurement of the value of the transverse MF by determining the resonance width. C. Excitation With Elliptically Polarized Light In the realistic experimental setup, the laser light polarization is not perfectly linear or circular. Consequently, in this subsection, we investigate how a CPT resonance obtained by imperfectly polarized laser light behaves in the presence of a probe MF. Experimental results for CPT resonances are presented for two cases, namely, a small deviation from a purely linear or purely circular polarization. These measurements were performed in flurescence with 8 mw laser power and a laser beam diameter of 2 mm. In the presence of an additional MF B add, a deviation of the laser light polarization from a purely linear or circular one by less than 10% causes a distortion of the Lorentzian resonance signal shape. The geometry of the experiment is the same as in Fig. 3. First we discuss a deviation from linear polarization. The ellipticity of the light is E y /E x =8%. The shape and width of the resonances were investigated in the presence of probe MFs applied parallel and perpendicular to the axis E x of the laser beam polarization. The additional MF perpendicular to E x widens the contour, as it does in the case of purely linear polarization. The MF directed along E x causes a split of the CPT resonance that is arranged symmetrically around the zero value of the scanned MF B scan. An example of a CPT resonance, obtained with elliptical polarization E y /E x =8% in the presence of B add =1.2 G, is shown in Fig. 9. The characteristic splitting shows a linear dependence on the amplitude of the additional MF (Fig. 10) with a slope of 0.46 mg/mg. It could well be Fig. 8. Amplitude and width of the level-crossing MF resonances in dependence on B add in case of circular laser polarization: squares, fluorescence; circles, transmission. Fig. 9. CPT resonance in case of elliptical polarization for B add =1,2 G; lower curve, polarization ellipse oriented vertically; upper curve, polarization ellipse tilted around the z axis by 15.

5 Huss et al. Vol. 23, No. 9/September 2006/ J. Opt. Soc. Am. B 1733 Brazhnikov et al. conclude that the amplitude of electromagnetically induced absorption (EIA) increases by more than 1 order of magnitude in optimal elliptically polarized light in comparison with excitation with linear polarization. For EIT or dark resonances, the maximum amplitude is obtained for pure linear polarization, which was confirmed by our experiment. The conclusions for the symmetry of the signal are proved by our experiment the line shape is symmetric in the case of exact resonance. Fig. 10. Splitting of the CPT resonance obtained with elliptical polarization in dependence on the additional MF B add The arrow indicates the splitting of the CPT resonance shown in Fig. 9 (lower trace). Fig. 11. Shape of the level-crossing MF resonance obtained in circular polarization and the CPT resonances in case of elliptical polarization with 8% deviation from the circular one. used for evaluation of MFs in the region of 0 1 G. The splitting of the resonance can be compensated by tilting the principal axis of the polarization ellipse around the z direction (Fig. 9). The change of a purely circular polarized laser light to a slightly elliptical one also has influences on the shape of the resonance an optical pumping signal with opposite sign is superimposed to the resonance (Fig. 11). Even though the optical pumping signal is not symmetric, the distinct MF resonance peak is always centered at the point of zero-scanning MF. Our investigations demonstrated that to apply level-crossing MF resonances (like CPT) to magnetometry one needs to strictly maintain the laser beam polarization quality and direction. Any deviation from perfect polarization causes signal distortion that would immediately result in distinct systematic measurement errors. Matsko et al. 17 showed that in NMOR signals obtained with elliptically polarized light, similar peculiarities are due to the creation of high-order ground-state coherence. In our experiment, an M-scheme excitation connects the m= +2 with the m= 2 Zeeman sublevel via a multiphoton process [hexadecapole moment m=4 ]. The created coherency is observed in transmission. The CPT signal will not be sensitive to the ellipticity of the exciting light if it is formed on the levels connected in a pure scheme (for instance F g =1 F e =0). New results for magnetooptical resonances in a elliptically polarized field for a closed F F+1 transition were published recently. 18,19 4. THEORETICAL ANALYSIS To analyze in detail the experimental results described in Subsection 3.A we carried out numerical calculations concerning the influence of the additional MF on the CPT resonances. The theoretical description in the present work proceeds from the equations in Refs. 20 and 21, which describe the interaction of an atomic system with a constant MF H 0 and a resonant laser radiation. A concrete model was developed for the case of orthogonal MFs, continuous (scanned) H 0, an additional arbitrarily oriented probe field H, and a linearly polarized laser field E 0,t. The irreducible tensor operator formalism was used. The advantages of this representation, together with a clear physical meaning of the tensor component, are related to the diagonalization of the relaxation matrix. A necessary condition is that binary collisions and radiation trapping are assumed to be the main relaxation processes in the atomic system. Then the relaxation constants k will depend only on the rank k of the statistic operator k q =f,,. 21,22 The set of equations describing the ground-state with quantum number F, the excited statef with quantum number F f, and the optical coherency, can be quoted for arbitrary angular momentum: ḟ q k + f k f q k = i B g f h 1 qh 0 f q k qk + k q k = i B g h 1 qh 0 q k k + q k q +1 k 1/2H 1 f q k q k + q +1 k 1/2H 1 f q+1 + L q k + 2F f +1 N f W v k0 q0, 1a k + q k q +1 k 1/2H 1 q k q k + q +1 k 1/2H 1 q+1 + M k q + 2F +1 N W v k0 q0 + f k f k q, 1b

6 1734 J. Opt. Soc. Am. B/ Vol. 23, No. 9/ September 2006 Huss et al. q k + k + i 0 q k = ih 1 1 Q H Q 1 J f +J +q 2k +1 k kq k 1 k q Q q B g j F f F k 1 k F + 1 k+k B g f f j f f F F f k 1 k F q f k + G k q. 1c In Eqs. (1), the first term on each right-hand side describes the magnetodipole interaction of the atomic system. Here H q q=0,±1 are the circular components of the MF H. The interaction with the laser field is described by excitation tensors L q k, M q k, and G q k, which are defined as L k q = ih 1 2F +1 1/2 E QC with a geometrical coefficient d k q +d q k 1 k+k +q, 2a C = 1 2J +q 2F f +1 1/2 2k +1 k 1 k k 1 k 3a q Q q, with F f F f F M k q = ih 1 2F +1 1/2 E QB 1 +k d k q +d q k 1 k+k +q, 2b B = 1 2J f +q 2F +1 1/2 2k +1 k 1 k F F F f k 1 k 3b q Q q, with G q k = ih 1 2F f +1 1/2 d E Q S fq k + 1 k+k R k q, 2c R = 1 2J +1 2F f +1 1/2 2k +1 k 1 k F f F F k 1 k 3c q Q q, S is obtained from R with substitution of f, and j = 2F +1 F +1 F 1/2. The last term in Eq. (1b) describes the transfer of population k=0 and coherence k=2 from the excited state F f to the ground state F. The relaxation constant f k representing this transfer is given by 23 F f F f F F 1 f = 1 F f +F + +1 f 0 2F f +1 2F +1 2J f +1 F f F 1, 4 2 J J f I We should note that the relaxation constant f k characterizes the losses in the channel F f F. In the case of a branching-ratio f 0 / f 0 close to 1, the atomic system is closed, and thus the losses are minimal. On the other hand, if this ratio is close to 0, the atomic system becomes an open one, and therefore the losses reach a maximum. In the particular case of the 87 Rb D 1 -line F f =1 F =2 and F f =1 F =1 transitions, the branching ratio can be derived from Eq. (4): / =5. The notations in Eqs. (1) are (as commonly used): B, Bohr s magneton;, Planck constant; g f and g, Landé factors for the corresponding levels; 0, resonance frequency for the given transition; W v, velocity distribution function; N f and N, population of the excited and ground states, and d, reduced matrix element of the dipole transition. Parentheses denote 3j-Wigner symbols, and brackets denote 6j-Wigner symbols. Using the basic equations, Eqs. (1a) (1c), one can write a concrete system of equations for the chosen atomic transition scheme in a certain geometry and experimental condition. In these calculations, the quantization axis was chosen to be parallel to the electric vector E z of the laser field, and the scanned MF H x was assumed to be perpendicular to this axis. Only the additional MF vectors component perpendicular to the scanned MF is of importance, and it can be resolved to H z (parallel to E z ) and H y (perpendicular to E z ). Using the rotating-wave approximation and assuming a monochromatic laser field propagating in the x direction L,k x, i.e., E Q L,t =e Q E exp i L t k x x +c. c., where the circular components are designated with e Q, the system of equations can be reduced to an algebraic one. The additional but not compulsory condition L 0 k was assumed to simplify the calculations. The equations written under these conditions for the transition J =2 J f =1 were solved numerically with the aim of examining the solution behavior as a function of parameters: the Rabi frequency d f E/h, the spontaneous emission transfer rate f k, and the stray field components B iadd. All these parameters and the MFs were expressed in units of. We present here the results concerning the stray MF influence on the resonance amplitude and width only. The values of the parameters were chosen in accordance with our experimental conditions. The radiative width of the upper level is known to be 6 MHz, while the evaluated time-of-flight width of the lower level is 10 khz, so the ratio of the upper to lower level decay rate constants is 500. All experimental investigations were performed with laser power density of 57 W/cm 2, providing for the parameter 24 d f E 2 /h 2 f approximately 5. By virtue of this estimation, the Rabi frequency was chosen to be 100. The model calculations for the geometry chosen in the experiment showed that the longitudinal alignment of the ground state plays a major role. An additional MF paral-

7 Huss et al. Vol. 23, No. 9/September 2006/ J. Opt. Soc. Am. B 1735 lel to E changes the optical coherence 0 k ; k=1,...,3, thus enhancing the alignment. The calculated dependencies of the excited-level population f 0 0 on stray MFs are proportional to the unpolarized fluorescence intensities observed. To compare the experimental data (see Figs. 4 and 6) with the model calculations a recalibration of into units of a magnetic flux density (cgs system of units) was done. The results are presented in Figs. 12 and 13. A good qualitative agreement is seen, especially for the amplitude dependence on the MF B add. A qualitative agreement between the CPT resonance measured width and the width calculated in our model can also be claimed (Figs. 12 and 13). The nonlinear behavior of the CPT resonance width at small field strengths is therefore well represented by the model calculations. It is worth mentioning that both effects (broadening of the CPT resonance and change of the CPT amplitude) in the presence of additional MFs parallel to the laser polarization direction are nonlinear effects. It should be also emphasized that the predictions of performed calculations have only qualitative character because, e.g., the real velocity distribution of atoms always present in thermal vapor cells was not taken into account. Fig. 12. Comparison of the calculated (curve) and experimentally obtained (squares) normalized amplitude and width of the fluorescence signal in dependence on the B add applied perpendicular to the laser beam polarization E las. 5. CONCLUSION The investigation of the influence of transverse MFs on CPT resonances in the cases of linear and elliptical polarization (and on the level-crossing MF resonances in the case of circular polarization) of the exciting laser light showed that the resonances obtained in such a singlefrequency level-crossing configuration are sensitive to probe MFs in the order of their width. The theoretical analysis of the influence of transverse MFs on the CPT resonances in the case of linearly polarized excitation is in good agreement with the experimental results. The results obtained can be used in MF measurements. The resonance obtained with circular polarized laser excitation shows a quite-good linear dependence of the signal width on a transverse probe magnetic field. This signal width (in milligrams) equals the value of the transverse field with good accuracy. A possible disadvantage of using the observed resonances for measuring MFs lies in the fact that such an experimental arrangement gives only the component in a plain perpendicular to the laser beam of the measured MF. The sensitivities of the resonances to MFs in the cases of excitation by linearly and circularly polarized laser light are comparable. The sensitivity can be increased by, e.g., using narrower structures in the CPT resonance 25 and by improving the registration system s noise performance. Fig. 13. Comparison of the calculated (curve) and experimentally obtained (squares) normalized amplitude and width of the fluorescence signal in dependence on the B add applied parallel to the laser beam polarization E las. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS This work was supported in part by FP5 (EU) project G6RD-CT and the Bulgarian National Council for Scientific Research (grants F-1006/00 and F-1409/ 04). E. Alipieva s address is alipieva@ie.bas.bg.

8 1736 J. Opt. Soc. Am. B/ Vol. 23, No. 9/ September 2006 Huss et al. REFERENCES 1. E. Arimondo, Coherent population trapping in laser spectroscopy, Prog. Opt. 35, (1996). 2. F. Renzoni, W. Maichen, L. Windholz, and E. Arimondo, Coherent population trapping with losses observed on the Hanle effect of the D1 sodium line, Phys. Rev. A 55, (1997). 3. D. Budker, W. Gawlik, D. Kimball, S. Rochester, V. Yashcuk, and A. Weis, Resonant nonlinear magnetooptical effects in atoms, Rev. Mod. Phys. 74, (2002). 4. E. B. Alexandrov, M. V. Balabas, A. S. Pasgalev, A. K. Vershovskii, and N. N. Yakobson, Double resonance atomic magnetometer, Laser Phys. 6, (1996). 5. I. K. Kominis, T. W. Kornack, J. C. Allred, and M. V. Romalis, A sub-femtotesla multichannel atomic magnetometer, Nature 422, (2003). 6. J. Dupont-Roc, S. Haroche, and C. Cohen-Tannoudji, Detection of very weak magnetic field (10-9 G) by 87 Rb zero field level-crossing resonances, Phys. Lett. 28A, (1969). 7. G. Bison, R. Wynands, and A. Weis, A laser pumped magnetometer for the mapping of human cardiomagnetic fields, Appl. Phys. B 76, (2003). 8. R. Wynands and A. Nagel, Precision spectroscopy with coherent dark states, Appl. Phys. B 68, 1 25 (1999). 9. C. Andreeva, G. Bevilacqua, V. Biancalana, S. Cartaleva, Y. Dancheva, T. Karaulanov, C. Marinelli, E. Mariotti, and L. Moi, Two-color coherent population trapping in a single Cs hyperfine transition, with application in magnetometry, Appl. Phys. B 76, (2003). 10. S. E. Harris, Electromagnetically induced transparancy, Phys. Today 50(7), (1997). 11. B. Cheron, H. Gilles, J. Hamel, O. Moreau, and H. Sorel, J. Phys. III 4, (1994). 12. F. Levi, A. Godone, J. Vanier, S. Micalizo, and G. Modugno, Line-shape of dark line and laser emission profile in CPT, Eur. Phys. J. D 12, (2000). 13. A. Taichanaichev, A. Tumaikin, V. Yudin, M. Stähler, R. Wynands, J. Kitching, and L. Holberg, Nonlinear resonance line shapes: Dependence on the transverse intensity distribution of the light beam, Phys. Rev. A 69, (2004). 14. A. Javan, O. Kocharovskaya, H. Lee, and M. Scully, Narrowing of electromagnetically induced transparency resonance in a Doppler-broadened medium, Phys. Rev. A 66, (2002). 15. A. Weis, S. Kanorsky, M. Arndt, and T. W. Hänsch, Spin physics in solid helium: experimental results and applications, Z. Phys. B: Condens. Matter 98, (1995). 16. C. Andreeva, S. Cartaleva, Y. Dancheva, V. Biancalana, A. Burchianti, C. Marinelli, E. Mariotti, L. Moi, and K. Nasyrov, Coherent spectroscopy of degenerate two-level systems in Cs, Phys. Rev. A 66, (2002). 17. A. B. Matsko, I. Novikova, M. Zubairy, and G. R. Welch, Nonlinear magneto-optical rotation of elliptically polarized light, Phys. Rev. A 67, (2003). 18. D. V. Brazhnikov, A. M. Tumaikin, and V. I. Yudin, and A. V. Taichenachev, Electromagnetically induced absorption and transparency in magneto-optical resonances in elliptically polarized field, J. Opt. Soc. Am. B 22, (2005). 19. D. V. Brazhnikov, A. V. Taichenachev, A. M. Tumaikin, V. I. Yudin, S. A. Zibrov, Ya. O. Dudin, V. V. Vasil ev, and V. L. Velichansky, Features of magneto-optical resonances in an elliptically polarized traveling light wave, JETP Lett. 83, (2006). 20. M. Dyakonov and V. Perel, On the theory of a gas laser in magnetic field, Opt. Spectrosc. 20, (1966). 21. B. Decomps, M. Dumont, and M. Ducloy, Laser Spectroscopy of Atoms and Molecules (Springer-Verlag, 1976). 22. M. Dyakonov and V. Perel, On the resonance scattering of a gase in magnetic field, Sov. Phys. JETP 47, (1964). 23. M. Ducloy and M. Dumont, Etude du transfert dexcitation par emissionspontanee, J. Phys. (Paris) 31, (1970). 24. S. Stenholm, Foundations of Laser Spectroscopy (Wiley- Interscience, 1984). 25. E. Alipieva, S. Gateva, E. Taskova, and S. Cartaleva, Narrow structure in the CPT resonance in Rb, Opt. Lett. 28, (2003).

Modelling of Nonlinear Interaction of Rb 87 Atoms with Polarized Radiation

Modelling of Nonlinear Interaction of Rb 87 Atoms with Polarized Radiation Bulg. J. Phys. 39 (2012) 150 164 Modelling of Nonlinear Interaction of Rb 87 Atoms with Polarized Radiation V. Polischuk 1, V. Domelunksen 1, E. Alipieva 2, G. Todorov 2 1 V.A. Fock Physics Institute,

More information

SUB-NATURAL-WIDTH N-RESONANCES OBSERVED IN LARGE FREQUENCY INTERVAL

SUB-NATURAL-WIDTH N-RESONANCES OBSERVED IN LARGE FREQUENCY INTERVAL SUB-NATURAL-WIDTH N-RESONANCES OBSERVED IN LARGE FREQUENCY INTERVAL A. KRASTEVA 1, S. GATEVA 1, A. SARGSYAN 2, D. SARKISYAN 2 AND S. CARTALEVA 1 1 Institute of Electronics, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences,

More information

High Resolution Laser Spectroscopy of Cesium Vapor Layers with Nanometric Thickness

High Resolution Laser Spectroscopy of Cesium Vapor Layers with Nanometric Thickness 10 High Resolution Laser Spectroscopy of Cesium Vapor Layers with Nanometric Thickness Stefka Cartaleva 1, Anna Krasteva 1, Armen Sargsyan 2, David Sarkisyan 2, Dimitar Slavov 1, Petko Todorov 1 and Kapka

More information

On non-vanishing amplitude of Hanle electromagnetically induced absorption in Rb

On non-vanishing amplitude of Hanle electromagnetically induced absorption in Rb On non-vanishing amplitude of Hanle electromagnetically induced absorption in Rb M. M. Mijailović, J. Dimitrijević, A. J. Krmpot, Z. D. Grujić, B. M. Panić, D. Arsenović, D. V. Pantelić, B. M. Jelenković

More information

Emergence of Electromagnetically Induced Absorption in a Perturbation Solution of Optical Bloch Equations 1

Emergence of Electromagnetically Induced Absorption in a Perturbation Solution of Optical Bloch Equations 1 ISSN 54-66X, Laser Physics, 2, Vol. 2, No. 5, pp. 985 989. Pleiades Publishing, Ltd., 2. Original Russian Text Astro, Ltd., 2. MODERN TRENDS IN LASER PHYSICS Emergence of Electromagnetically Induced Absorption

More information

Line narrowing of electromagnetically induced transparency in Rb with a longitudinal magnetic field

Line narrowing of electromagnetically induced transparency in Rb with a longitudinal magnetic field PHYSICAL REVIEW A 79, 1388 29 Line narrowing of electromagnetically induced transparency in Rb with a longitudinal magnetic field S. M. Iftiquar and Vasant Natarajan* Department of Physics, Indian Institute

More information

GROUND-STATE HANLE RESONANCES IN CESIUM VAPOR CONFINED IN NANOSCOPIC THIN CELL (progress report)

GROUND-STATE HANLE RESONANCES IN CESIUM VAPOR CONFINED IN NANOSCOPIC THIN CELL (progress report) GROUND-STATE HANLE RESONANCES IN CESIUM VAPOR (progress report) M. Auzinsh, K. Blush, Riga, Latvia C. Andreeva, S. Cartaleva, L. Petrov Institute of Electronics, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences Sofia, Bulgaria

More information

NONLINEAR MAGNETO-OPTIC EFFECTS. IN OPTICALLY DENSE Rb VAPOR. A Dissertation IRINA BORISOVNA NOVIKOVA

NONLINEAR MAGNETO-OPTIC EFFECTS. IN OPTICALLY DENSE Rb VAPOR. A Dissertation IRINA BORISOVNA NOVIKOVA NONLINEAR MAGNETO-OPTIC EFFECTS IN OPTICALLY DENSE Rb VAPOR A Dissertation by IRINA BORISOVNA NOVIKOVA Submitted to the Office of Graduate Studies of Texas A&M University in partial fulfillment of the

More information

Nonlinear Electro- and Magneto-Optic Effects related to Bennett Structures

Nonlinear Electro- and Magneto-Optic Effects related to Bennett Structures Nonlinear Electro- and Magneto-Optic Effects related to Bennett Structures D. Budker, 1, 2, D. F. Kimball, 1 S. M. Rochester, 1 and V. V. Yashchuk 1 1 Department of Physics, University of California at

More information

Ground-state magneto-optical resonances in cesium vapor confined in an extremely thin cell

Ground-state magneto-optical resonances in cesium vapor confined in an extremely thin cell Ground-state magneto-optical resonances in cesium vapor confined in an extremely thin cell C Andreeva, 1 A Atvars, 2 M Auzinsh, 2 K Blush, 2 S Cartaleva, 1, * L Petrov, 1 and D Slavov 1 1 Institute of

More information

Formation of Narrow Optical Resonance by Micrometer Thin Rb- Vapor Layer

Formation of Narrow Optical Resonance by Micrometer Thin Rb- Vapor Layer Formation of Narrow Optical Resonance by Micrometer Thin Rb- Vapor Layer A. Sargsyan Institute for Physical Research, NAS of Armenia, Ashtarak-00, Armenia, sarmeno@mail.ru ABSTRACT Recently developed thin

More information

Research Article Coherent Population Trapping Resonances in Cs Atomic Vapor Layers of Micrometric Thickness

Research Article Coherent Population Trapping Resonances in Cs Atomic Vapor Layers of Micrometric Thickness International Optics Volume 2011, Article ID 683415, 11 pages doi:10.1155/2011/683415 Research Article Coherent Population Trapping Resonances in Cs Atomic Vapor Layers of Micrometric Thickness A. Krasteva,

More information

Theory of double resonance magnetometers based on atomic alignment

Theory of double resonance magnetometers based on atomic alignment Published in "Physical Review A 74: 3341, 26" which should be cited to refer to this work. Theory of double resonance magnetometers based on atomic alignment Antoine Weis* and Georg Bison Physics Department,

More information

Part I. Principles and techniques

Part I. Principles and techniques Part I Principles and techniques 1 General principles and characteristics of optical magnetometers D. F. Jackson Kimball, E. B. Alexandrov, and D. Budker 1.1 Introduction Optical magnetometry encompasses

More information

An optically modulated zero-field atomic magnetometer with suppressed spinexchange

An optically modulated zero-field atomic magnetometer with suppressed spinexchange An optically modulated zero-field atomic magnetometer with suppressed spinexchange broadening R. Jiménez-Martínez 1,2,a), S. Knappe 1, and J. Kitching 1 1 Time and Frequency Division, National Institute

More information

EIT and diffusion of atomic coherence

EIT and diffusion of atomic coherence Journal of Modern Optics Vol. 52, No. 16, 10 November 2005, 2381 2390 EIT and diffusion of atomic coherence I. NOVIKOVA*y, Y. XIAOy, D. F. PHILLIPSy and R. L. WALSWORTHyz yharvard-smithsonian Center for

More information

arxiv: v1 [physics.atom-ph] 22 Feb 2014

arxiv: v1 [physics.atom-ph] 22 Feb 2014 Vectorial atomic magnetometer based on coherent transients of laser absorption in Rb vapor L. Lenci, A. Auyuanet, S. Barreiro, P. Valente, A. Lezama, and H. Failache Instituto de Física, Facultad de Ingeniería,

More information

Pump-probe nonlinear magneto-optical rotation with frequency-modulated light

Pump-probe nonlinear magneto-optical rotation with frequency-modulated light Pump-probe nonlinear magneto-optical rotation with frequency-modulated light S. Pustelny, 1 D. F. Jackson Kimball, 2 S. M. Rochester, 3 V. V. Yashchuk, 4 W. Gawlik, 1 and D. Budker 3,5 1 Centrum Badań

More information

ATOMIC AND LASER SPECTROSCOPY

ATOMIC AND LASER SPECTROSCOPY ALAN CORNEY ATOMIC AND LASER SPECTROSCOPY CLARENDON PRESS OXFORD 1977 Contents 1. INTRODUCTION 1.1. Planck's radiation law. 1 1.2. The photoelectric effect 4 1.3. Early atomic spectroscopy 5 1.4. The postulates

More information

High-resolution hyperfine spectroscopy of excited states using electromagnetically induced transparency

High-resolution hyperfine spectroscopy of excited states using electromagnetically induced transparency EUROPHYSICS LETTERS 15 October 2005 Europhys. Lett., 72 (2), pp. 221 227 (2005) DOI: 10.1209/epl/i2005-10228-6 High-resolution hyperfine spectroscopy of excited states using electromagnetically induced

More information

ABSTRACT INVESTIGATION OF SIGN REVERSAL BETWEEN ELECTROMAGNETICALLY INDUCED TRANSPARENCY AND ABSORPTION IN ATOMIC VAPOR. by Amanda N.

ABSTRACT INVESTIGATION OF SIGN REVERSAL BETWEEN ELECTROMAGNETICALLY INDUCED TRANSPARENCY AND ABSORPTION IN ATOMIC VAPOR. by Amanda N. ABSTRACT INVESTIGATION OF SIGN REVERSAL BETWEEN ELECTROMAGNETICALLY INDUCED TRANSPARENCY AND ABSORPTION IN ATOMIC VAPOR by Amanda N. Day We investigate electromagnetically induced transparency (EIT) and

More information

Gases as perspective magneto optical and electro optical materials

Gases as perspective magneto optical and electro optical materials Gases as perspective magneto optical and electro optical materials Marcis Auzinsh -1- Faculty and Mathematics -2- -3- Verde constant Faraday effect V ~ 3x10-5 rad/g/cm dense flint glass V ~ 10 4 rad/g/cm

More information

Transit time broadening contribution to the linear evanescent susceptibility

Transit time broadening contribution to the linear evanescent susceptibility Supplementary note 1 Transit time broadening contribution to the linear evanescent susceptibility In this section we analyze numerically the susceptibility of atoms subjected to an evanescent field for

More information

pulses. Sec. III contains the simulated results of the interaction process and their analysis, followed by conclusions in Sec. IV.

pulses. Sec. III contains the simulated results of the interaction process and their analysis, followed by conclusions in Sec. IV. High and uniform coherence creation in Doppler broadened double Ʌ- like atomic system by a train of femtosecond optical pulses Amarendra K. Sarma* and Pawan Kumar Department of Physics, Indian Institute

More information

Optically polarized atoms. Marcis Auzinsh, University of Latvia Dmitry Budker, UC Berkeley and LBNL Simon M. Rochester, UC Berkeley

Optically polarized atoms. Marcis Auzinsh, University of Latvia Dmitry Budker, UC Berkeley and LBNL Simon M. Rochester, UC Berkeley Optically polarized atoms Marcis Auzinsh, University of atvia Dmitry Budker, UC Berkeley and BN Simon M. Rochester, UC Berkeley 1 Chapter 6: Coherence in atomic systems Exciting a 0ö1 transition with z

More information

Repeated interaction model for diffusion-induced Ramsey narrowing

Repeated interaction model for diffusion-induced Ramsey narrowing Repeated interaction model for diffusion-induced Ramsey narrowing Yanhong Xiao 1, Irina Novikova 2, David F. Phillips 1, Ronald L. Walsworth 1,3 1 Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, Cambridge,

More information

High Sensitivity Optically Pumped Quantum Magnetometer

High Sensitivity Optically Pumped Quantum Magnetometer Edith Cowan University Research Online ECU Publications 2013 2013 High Sensitivity Optically Pumped Quantum Magnetometer Valentina Tiporlini Edith Cowan University, vtiporl0@our.ecu.edu.au Kamal Alameh

More information

Narrow and contrast resonance of increased absorption in Λ-system observed in Rb cell with buffer gas

Narrow and contrast resonance of increased absorption in Λ-system observed in Rb cell with buffer gas , pp. 84-94 Narrow and contrast resonance of increased absorption in Λ-system observed in Rb cell with buffer gas A. Sargsyan 1, A. Papoyan 1, A. Sarkisyan 1, Yu. Malakyan 1, G. Grigoryan 1, D. Sarkisyan

More information

Saturation Absorption Spectroscopy of Rubidium Atom

Saturation Absorption Spectroscopy of Rubidium Atom Saturation Absorption Spectroscopy of Rubidium Atom Jayash Panigrahi August 17, 2013 Abstract Saturated absorption spectroscopy has various application in laser cooling which have many relevant uses in

More information

Fundamentals of Spectroscopy for Optical Remote Sensing. Course Outline 2009

Fundamentals of Spectroscopy for Optical Remote Sensing. Course Outline 2009 Fundamentals of Spectroscopy for Optical Remote Sensing Course Outline 2009 Part I. Fundamentals of Quantum Mechanics Chapter 1. Concepts of Quantum and Experimental Facts 1.1. Blackbody Radiation and

More information

Nonlinear magneto-optical rotation in optically thick media

Nonlinear magneto-optical rotation in optically thick media Nonlinear magneto-optical rotation in optically thick media S. M. Rochester 1 1,, and D. Budker 1 Department of Physics, University of California at Berkeley, Berkeley, California 97-7 Nuclear Science

More information

Laser cooling of 173 Yb for isotope separation and precision hyperfine spectroscopy

Laser cooling of 173 Yb for isotope separation and precision hyperfine spectroscopy Laser cooling of 173 Yb for isotope separation and precision hyperfine spectroscopy Dipankar Das and Vasant Natarajan* Department of Physics, Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore 560 012, India Received

More information

Atomic magnetometers: new twists to the old story. Michael Romalis Princeton University

Atomic magnetometers: new twists to the old story. Michael Romalis Princeton University Atomic magnetometers: new twists to the old story Michael Romalis Princeton University Outline K magnetometer Elimination of spin-exchange relaxation Experimental setup Magnetometer performance Theoretical

More information

Single Emitter Detection with Fluorescence and Extinction Spectroscopy

Single Emitter Detection with Fluorescence and Extinction Spectroscopy Single Emitter Detection with Fluorescence and Extinction Spectroscopy Michael Krall Elements of Nanophotonics Associated Seminar Recent Progress in Nanooptics & Photonics May 07, 2009 Outline Single molecule

More information

Compendium of concepts you should know to understand the Optical Pumping experiment. \ CFP Feb. 11, 2009, rev. Ap. 5, 2012, Jan. 1, 2013, Dec.28,2013.

Compendium of concepts you should know to understand the Optical Pumping experiment. \ CFP Feb. 11, 2009, rev. Ap. 5, 2012, Jan. 1, 2013, Dec.28,2013. Compendium of concepts you should know to understand the Optical Pumping experiment. \ CFP Feb. 11, 2009, rev. Ap. 5, 2012, Jan. 1, 2013, Dec.28,2013. What follows is specialized to the alkali atoms, of

More information

Realisation of Transparency below the One-Photon Absorption Level for a Coupling Laser Driving a Lambda System under EIT Conditions

Realisation of Transparency below the One-Photon Absorption Level for a Coupling Laser Driving a Lambda System under EIT Conditions Vol. 112 (2007) ACTA PHYSICA POLONICA A No. 5 Proceedings of the International School and Conference on Optics and Optical Materials, ISCOM07, Belgrade, Serbia, September 3 7, 2007 Realisation of Transparency

More information

9 Atomic Coherence in Three-Level Atoms

9 Atomic Coherence in Three-Level Atoms 9 Atomic Coherence in Three-Level Atoms 9.1 Coherent trapping - dark states In multi-level systems coherent superpositions between different states (atomic coherence) may lead to dramatic changes of light

More information

Interference effects on the probe absorption in a driven three-level atomic system. by a coherent pumping field

Interference effects on the probe absorption in a driven three-level atomic system. by a coherent pumping field Interference effects on the probe absorption in a driven three-level atomic system by a coherent pumping field V. Stancalie, O. Budriga, A. Mihailescu, V. Pais National Institute for Laser, Plasma and

More information

A Stern-Gerlach experiment for slow light

A Stern-Gerlach experiment for slow light 1 A Stern-Gerlach experiment for slow light Leon Karpa and Martin Weitz* Physikalisches Institut der Universität Tübingen, Auf der Morgenstelle 14, 72076 Tübingen, Germany * Present address: Center of

More information

HYPERFINE STRUCTURE CONSTANTS IN THE 102D3/2 AND 112D 3/2 STATES OF 85Rb M. GLOW

HYPERFINE STRUCTURE CONSTANTS IN THE 102D3/2 AND 112D 3/2 STATES OF 85Rb M. GLOW Vol. 83 (1993) ACTA PHYSICA POLONICA A No. 2 HYPERFINE STRUCTURE CONSTANTS IN THE 102D3/2 AND 112D 3/2 STATES OF 85Rb M. GLOW Institute of Physics, Polish Academy of Sciences Al. Lotników 32/46, 02-668

More information

Laser system for EIT spectroscopy of cold Rb atoms

Laser system for EIT spectroscopy of cold Rb atoms Laser system for EIT spectroscopy of cold Rb atoms K. Kowalski a K. Vaseva b, S. Gateva b, M. Głódź a, L. Petrov b, J. Szonert a a Institute of Physics, PAS, Al. Lotników 32/46, 02-668 Warsaw, Poland b

More information

Macroscopic magnetic field generated in laser atom interaction

Macroscopic magnetic field generated in laser atom interaction Macroscopic magnetic field generated in laser atom interaction Swarupananda Pradhan Laser and Plasma Technology Division, Bhabha Atomic Research Centre, Mumbai-85, India Homi Bhabha National Institute,

More information

arxiv: v3 [physics.optics] 20 Feb 2017

arxiv: v3 [physics.optics] 20 Feb 2017 Coherent population trapping (CPT) versus electromagnetically induced transparency (EIT) Sumanta Khan, Molahalli Panidhara Kumar, Vineet Bharti, and Vasant Natarajan Department of Physics, Indian Institute

More information

Internal magnetic field measurement in tokamak plasmas using a Zeeman polarimeter

Internal magnetic field measurement in tokamak plasmas using a Zeeman polarimeter PRAMANA cfl Indian Academy of Sciences Vol. 55, Nos 5 & 6 journal of Nov. & Dec. 2000 physics pp. 751 756 Internal magnetic field measurement in tokamak plasmas using a Zeeman polarimeter M JAGADEESHWARI

More information

Citation IEEE Transactions on Magnetics (201.

Citation IEEE Transactions on Magnetics (201. Effect of Spatial Homogeneity of Sp TitleMagnetic Field Response of an Optic Magnetometer Using a Hybrid Cell of Author(s) Ito, Yosuke; Ohnishi, Hiroyuki; Kam Tetsuo Citation IEEE Transactions on Magnetics

More information

EE-LE E OPTI T C A L S Y TE

EE-LE E OPTI T C A L S Y TE 1> p p γ 1 γ > 3 c 3> p p +> > 1> THREE-LEVEL OPTICAL SYSTEMS . THREE-LEVEL OPTICAL SYSTEMS () OUTLINE.1 BASIC THEORY.1 STIRAP: stimulated raman adiabatic passage. EIT: electromagnetically induced transparency.3

More information

OPTI 511L Fall Objectives:

OPTI 511L Fall Objectives: RJ Jones OPTI 511L Fall 2017 Optical Sciences Experiment: Saturated Absorption Spectroscopy (2 weeks) In this experiment we explore the use of a single mode tunable external cavity diode laser (ECDL) to

More information

Peculiar long-term fluorescence of Rb atoms in coated vapor cell with internal atomic source

Peculiar long-term fluorescence of Rb atoms in coated vapor cell with internal atomic source Peculiar long-term fluorescence of Rb atoms in coated vapor cell with internal atomic source S. N. Atutov *, V. A. Sorokin Institute of Automation and Electrometry SB RAS, Koptyug Ave. 1, 630090 Novosibirsk,

More information

arxiv: v1 [physics.atom-ph] 6 Nov 2018

arxiv: v1 [physics.atom-ph] 6 Nov 2018 Evidence for degenerate mirrorless lasing in alkali metal vapor: forward beam magneto-optical experiment Aram Papoyan 1, Svetlana Shmavonyan 1, Aleksandr Khanbekyan 1, Hrayr Azizbekyan 1, Marina Movsisyan

More information

arxiv: v2 [quant-ph] 13 Dec 2017

arxiv: v2 [quant-ph] 13 Dec 2017 Magnetic coherent population trapping in a single ion arxiv:1704.01070v2 [quant-ph] 13 Dec 2017 S. Das, 1 P. Liu, 1 B. Grémaud, 1, 2, 3 1, 2, 3 and M. Mukherjee 1 Centre for Quantum Technologies, National

More information

arxiv:quant-ph/ v1 2 Oct 2003

arxiv:quant-ph/ v1 2 Oct 2003 Slow Light in Doppler Broadened Two level Systems G. S. Agarwal and Tarak Nath Dey Physical Research Laboratory, Navrangpura, Ahmedabad-38 9, India (October 31, 218) We show that the propagation of light

More information

Collimated blue light generated by four-wave mixing in Rb vapour

Collimated blue light generated by four-wave mixing in Rb vapour Collimated blue light generated by four-wave mixing in Rb vapour Alexander M. Akulshin, Russell J. McLean, Andrei I. Sidorov, and Peter Hannaford Centre for Atom Optics and Ultrafast Spectroscopy, Swinburne

More information

Resonant Magneto-Optical Rotation: New Twists in an Old Plot

Resonant Magneto-Optical Rotation: New Twists in an Old Plot LBNL-41149 1 Resonant Magneto-Optical Rotation: New Twists in an Old Plot Dmitry Budker a,b,, Valeriy Yashchuk a,c,, and Max Zolotorev d, a Department of Physics, University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley,

More information

Γ43 γ. Pump Γ31 Γ32 Γ42 Γ41

Γ43 γ. Pump Γ31 Γ32 Γ42 Γ41 Supplementary Figure γ 4 Δ+δe Γ34 Γ43 γ 3 Δ Ω3,4 Pump Ω3,4, Ω3 Γ3 Γ3 Γ4 Γ4 Γ Γ Supplementary Figure Schematic picture of theoretical model: The picture shows a schematic representation of the theoretical

More information

Doppler-Free Spectroscopy of Hyperfine Zeeman Effects in Rubidium

Doppler-Free Spectroscopy of Hyperfine Zeeman Effects in Rubidium Doppler-Free Spectroscopy of Hyperfine Zeeman Effects in Rubidium Samuel Bader and Leo Zhou MIT Department of Physics (Dated: May 19, 2013) The hyperfine Zeeman effect is observed via Doppler-free spectroscopy

More information

Laser Cooling and Trapping of Atoms

Laser Cooling and Trapping of Atoms Chapter 2 Laser Cooling and Trapping of Atoms Since its conception in 1975 [71, 72] laser cooling has revolutionized the field of atomic physics research, an achievement that has been recognized by the

More information

The near-infrared spectra and distribution of excited states of electrodeless discharge rubidium vapour lamps

The near-infrared spectra and distribution of excited states of electrodeless discharge rubidium vapour lamps The near-infrared spectra and distribution of excited states of electrodeless discharge rubidium vapour lamps Sun Qin-Qing( ) a)b), Miao Xin-Yu( ) a), Sheng Rong-Wu( ) c), and Chen Jing-Biao( ) a)b) a)

More information

Coherent population trapping (CPT) versus electromagnetically induced transparency (EIT)

Coherent population trapping (CPT) versus electromagnetically induced transparency (EIT) Eur. Phys. J. D (217) 71: 38 DOI: 1.114/epjd/e217-7676-x Coherent population trapping (CPT) versus electromagnetically induced transparency (EIT) Sumanta Khan, Molahalli Panidhara Kumar, Vineet Bharti

More information

Stored light and EIT at high optical depths

Stored light and EIT at high optical depths Stored light and EIT at high optical depths M. Klein a,b, Y. Xiao a, M. Hohensee a,b, D. F. Phillips a, and R. L. Walsworth a,b a Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, Cambridge, MA, 02138 USA b

More information

Sensitive Magnetometry based on Nonlinear Magneto-Optical Rotation

Sensitive Magnetometry based on Nonlinear Magneto-Optical Rotation Sensitive Magnetometry based on Nonlinear Magneto-Optical Rotation D. Budker 1,2,,D.F.Kimball 1,S.M.Rochester 1,V.V.Yashchuk 1, and M. Zolotorev 3 1 Department of Physics, University of California at Berkeley,

More information

Sensitive detection of magnetic fields including their orientation with a magnetometer based on atomic phase coherence

Sensitive detection of magnetic fields including their orientation with a magnetometer based on atomic phase coherence PHYSICAL REVIEW A VOLUME 58, NUMBER 3 SEPTEMBER 1998 Sensitive detection of magnetic fields including their orientation with a magnetometer based on atomic phase coherence Hwang Lee, 1,2 Michael Fleischhauer,

More information

Laser Frequency Stabilization Using Linear Magneto-Optics: Technical Notes

Laser Frequency Stabilization Using Linear Magneto-Optics: Technical Notes REPORT LBNL-43523, June 1999, Berkeley, California Laser Frequency Stabilization Using Linear Magneto-Optics: Technical Notes Valeriy Yashchuk a,b,, Dmitry Budker a,c,, and John Davis a, a Department of

More information

arxiv: v1 [physics.atom-ph] 9 Feb 2009

arxiv: v1 [physics.atom-ph] 9 Feb 2009 arxiv:92.143v1 [physics.atom-ph] 9 Feb 29 Modulation-free pump-probe spectroscopy of strontium atoms C Javaux, I G Hughes, G Lochead, J Millen and M P A Jones Department of Physics, Durham University,

More information

Nuclear spin maser with a novel masing mechanism and its application to the search for an atomic EDM in 129 Xe

Nuclear spin maser with a novel masing mechanism and its application to the search for an atomic EDM in 129 Xe Nuclear spin maser with a novel masing mechanism and its application to the search for an atomic EDM in 129 Xe A. Yoshimi RIKEN K. Asahi, S. Emori, M. Tsukui, RIKEN, Tokyo Institute of Technology Nuclear

More information

Collisional Transfer of Atomic Coherence

Collisional Transfer of Atomic Coherence Collisional Transfer of Atomic Coherence Joseph Goldfrank College of William and Mary, Dept. of Physics 11 May 009 1 1 Introduction 1.1 Motivation Quantum information storage is one of the major requirements

More information

Electromagnetically Induced Transparency (EIT) Amplitude Noise Spectroscopy. Abstract

Electromagnetically Induced Transparency (EIT) Amplitude Noise Spectroscopy. Abstract Electromagnetically Induced Transparency (EIT) Amplitude Noise Spectroscopy Ben Whitenack, 1 Devan Tormey, 2 Michael Crescimanno, 3 Andrew C. Funk, 1 and Shannon O Leary 1 1 Lewis & Clark College, Portland,

More information

Pulse retrieval and soliton formation in a nonstandard scheme for dynamic electromagnetically induced transparency

Pulse retrieval and soliton formation in a nonstandard scheme for dynamic electromagnetically induced transparency Pulse retrieval and soliton formation in a nonstandard scheme for dynamic electromagnetically induced transparency Amy Peng, Mattias Johnsson, and Joseph J. Hope Centre for Quantum Atom Optics, Department

More information

Investigations of optical pumping for magnetometry using an autolocking

Investigations of optical pumping for magnetometry using an autolocking Investigations of optical pumping for magnetometry using an autolocking laser system A. Pouliot a, H.C. Beica a, A. Carew a, A. Vorozcovs a, G. Carlse a, B. Barrett b and A. Kumarakrishnan a, a Dept. of

More information

Large Faraday rotation of resonant light in a cold atomic cloud

Large Faraday rotation of resonant light in a cold atomic cloud PHYSICAL REVIEW A, VOLUME 64, 033402 Large Faraday rotation of resonant light in a cold atomic cloud G. Labeyrie, C. Miniatura, and R. Kaiser Laboratoire Ondes et Désordre, FRE 2302 CNRS, 1361 route des

More information

σ(τ) = 1 ηe 1 ν (a) (b)

σ(τ) = 1 ηe 1 ν (a) (b) A Novel Absorption Resonance for Atomic Clocks David F. Phillips, Irina Novikova, Sergei Zibrov, Chris Smallwood Aleksei V. Taichenachev, Valeriy I. Yudin, Ronald L. Walsworth, and Alexander S. Zibrov

More information

Ultrahigh-Quality Magneto-Optical Resonances of Electromagnetically Induced Absorption in a Buffer-Gas-Filled Vapor Cell

Ultrahigh-Quality Magneto-Optical Resonances of Electromagnetically Induced Absorption in a Buffer-Gas-Filled Vapor Cell Ultrahigh-Quality Magneto-Optical Resonances of Electromagnetically Induced Absorption in a Buffer-Gas-Filled Vapor Cell Denis Brazhnikov 1,2, Stepan Ignatovich 1, Vladislav Vishnyakov 1, Christina Andreeva

More information

Optical Pumping of Rb 85 & Rb 87

Optical Pumping of Rb 85 & Rb 87 Optical Pumping of Rb 85 & Rb 87 Fleet Admiral Tim Welsh PhD. M.D. J.D. (Dated: February 28, 2013) In this experiment we penetrate the mystery surrounding the hyperfine structure of Rb 85 and Rb 87. We

More information

The Hanle effect and level crossing spectroscopy in Rb vapour under strong laser excitation

The Hanle effect and level crossing spectroscopy in Rb vapour under strong laser excitation INSTITUTE OF PHYSICSPUBLISHING JOURNAL OFPHYSICSB: ATOMIC, MOLECULAR AND OPTICAL PHYSICS J. Phys. B: At. Mol. Opt. Phys. 36 (2003) 1161 1173 PII: S0953-4075(03)40183-1 The Hanle effect and level crossing

More information

Habilitation à diriger des recherches

Habilitation à diriger des recherches Habilitation à diriger des recherches Ferruccio Renzoni To cite this version: Ferruccio Renzoni. Habilitation à diriger des recherches. Atomic Physics. Université Pierre et Marie Curie - Paris VI, 2003.

More information

EIT Intensity Correlation Power Broadening in a Buffer Gas

EIT Intensity Correlation Power Broadening in a Buffer Gas EIT Intensity Correlation Power Broadening in a Buffer Gas Aojie Zheng, Alaina Green, Michael Crescimanno, 2 and Shannon O Leary Lewis & Clark College, Portland, OR 9729 2 Department of Physics and Astronomy,

More information

Optical pumping of rubidium

Optical pumping of rubidium Optical pumping of rubidium Quinn Pratt, John Prior, Brennan Campbell a) (Dated: 25 October 2015) The effects of a magnetic field incident on a sample of rubidium were examined both in the low-field Zeeman

More information

California Institute of Technology Physics 77. Optical Pumping. Eric D. Black. September 27, 2004

California Institute of Technology Physics 77. Optical Pumping. Eric D. Black. September 27, 2004 California Institute of Technology Physics 77 Optical Pumping Eric D. Black September 7, 004 Sometimes you want to magnetize a gas, to align all of the little magnetic moments of the gas atoms in the same

More information

Saturated Absorption Spectroscopy (Based on Teachspin manual)

Saturated Absorption Spectroscopy (Based on Teachspin manual) Saturated Absorption Spectroscopy (Based on Teachspin manual) 1 Background One of the most important scientific applications of lasers is in the area of precision atomic and molecular spectroscopy. Spectroscopy

More information

Three-Dimensional Magnetic Mapping using. Retro-reflected Light on EIT

Three-Dimensional Magnetic Mapping using. Retro-reflected Light on EIT Three-Dimensional Magnetic Mapping using Electromagnetically Induced Transparency and the Effects of Retro-reflected Light on EIT Jacob A. Fry Advisor: Irina Novikova The College of William and Mary Senior

More information

Comments to Atkins: Physical chemistry, 7th edition.

Comments to Atkins: Physical chemistry, 7th edition. Comments to Atkins: Physical chemistry, 7th edition. Chapter 16: p. 483, Eq. (16.1). The definition that the wave number is the inverse of the wave length should be used. That is much smarter. p. 483-484.

More information

Atomic Coherent Trapping and Properties of Trapped Atom

Atomic Coherent Trapping and Properties of Trapped Atom Commun. Theor. Phys. (Beijing, China 46 (006 pp. 556 560 c International Academic Publishers Vol. 46, No. 3, September 15, 006 Atomic Coherent Trapping and Properties of Trapped Atom YANG Guo-Jian, XIA

More information

Lecture 11: Polarized Light. Fundamentals of Polarized Light. Descriptions of Polarized Light. Scattering Polarization. Zeeman Effect.

Lecture 11: Polarized Light. Fundamentals of Polarized Light. Descriptions of Polarized Light. Scattering Polarization. Zeeman Effect. Lecture 11: Polarized Light Outline 1 Fundamentals of Polarized Light 2 Descriptions of Polarized Light 3 Scattering Polarization 4 Zeeman Effect 5 Hanle Effect Fundamentals of Polarized Light Electromagnetic

More information

Quantum Information Storage with Slow and Stopped Light

Quantum Information Storage with Slow and Stopped Light Quantum Information Storage with Slow and Stopped Light Joseph A. Yasi Department of Physics, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (Dated: December 14, 2006) Abstract This essay describes the phenomena

More information

Mossbauer Spectroscopy

Mossbauer Spectroscopy Mossbauer Spectroscopy Emily P. Wang MIT Department of Physics The ultra-high resolution ( E = E 10 12 ) method of Mossbauer spectroscopy was used to probe various nuclear effects. The Zeeman splittings

More information

The Zeeman Effect refers to the splitting of spectral

The Zeeman Effect refers to the splitting of spectral Calculation of the Bohr Magneton Using the Zeeman Effect Robert Welch Abstract The Zeeman Effect was predicted by Hendrik Lorentz and first observed by Pieter Zeeman in 1896. It refers to the splitting

More information

Do we need quantum light to test quantum memory? M. Lobino, C. Kupchak, E. Figueroa, J. Appel, B. C. Sanders, Alex Lvovsky

Do we need quantum light to test quantum memory? M. Lobino, C. Kupchak, E. Figueroa, J. Appel, B. C. Sanders, Alex Lvovsky Do we need quantum light to test quantum memory? M. Lobino, C. Kupchak, E. Figueroa, J. Appel, B. C. Sanders, Alex Lvovsky Outline EIT and quantum memory for light Quantum processes: an introduction Process

More information

Observation of large continuous-wave two-photon optical amplification

Observation of large continuous-wave two-photon optical amplification PHYSICAL REVIEW A VOLUME 56, NUMBER 2 AUGUST 1997 Observation of large continuous-wave two-photon optical amplification Hope M. Concannon, William J. Brown, Jeff R. Gardner, and Daniel J. Gauthier Department

More information

arxiv:quant-ph/ v3 17 Nov 2003

arxiv:quant-ph/ v3 17 Nov 2003 Stationary Pulses of Light in an Atomic Medium M. Bajcsy 1,2, A. S. Zibrov 1,3,4 and M. D. Lukin 1 1 Physics Department, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA 2 Division of Engineering and Applied

More information

Temperature stability of a dichroic atomic vapor laser lock

Temperature stability of a dichroic atomic vapor laser lock Temperature stability of a dichroic atomic vapor laser lock Jessica M. Reeves, Ofir Garcia, and Charles A. Sackett We have investigated the temperature stability of the dichroic atomic vapor laser lock

More information

Elements of Quantum Optics

Elements of Quantum Optics Pierre Meystre Murray Sargent III Elements of Quantum Optics Fourth Edition With 124 Figures fya Springer Contents 1 Classical Electromagnetic Fields 1 1.1 Maxwell's Equations in a Vacuum 2 1.2 Maxwell's

More information

MIT Department of Nuclear Science & Engineering

MIT Department of Nuclear Science & Engineering 1 MIT Department of Nuclear Science & Engineering Thesis Prospectus for the Bachelor of Science Degree in Nuclear Science and Engineering Nicolas Lopez Development of a Nanoscale Magnetometer Through Utilization

More information

Spin-exchange-relaxation-free magnetometry with Cs vapor

Spin-exchange-relaxation-free magnetometry with Cs vapor Spin-exchange-relaxation-free magnetometry with Cs vapor M. P. Ledbetter,* I. M. Savukov, V. M. Acosta, and D. Budker Department of Physics, University of California at Berkeley, Berkeley, California 9470-7300,

More information

Electromagnetically induced absorption and transparency due to resonant two-field excitation of quasidegenerate levels in Rb vapor

Electromagnetically induced absorption and transparency due to resonant two-field excitation of quasidegenerate levels in Rb vapor PHYSICAL REVIEW A VOLUME 57, NUMBER 4 APRIL 1998 Electromagnetically induced absorption and transparency due to resonant two-field excitation of quasidegenerate levels in Rb vapor A. M. Akulshin,* S. Barreiro,

More information

What Makes a Laser Light Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation Main Requirements of the Laser Laser Gain Medium (provides the light

What Makes a Laser Light Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation Main Requirements of the Laser Laser Gain Medium (provides the light What Makes a Laser Light Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation Main Requirements of the Laser Laser Gain Medium (provides the light amplification) Optical Resonator Cavity (greatly increase

More information

Optical Pumping in Rubidium

Optical Pumping in Rubidium ADVANCED UNDERGRADUATE LABORATORY EXPERIMENT 5, Rb Optical Pumping in Rubidium Revised: March 1990 By: John Pitre 1 Purpose The object of this experiment is to measure the Zeeman splitting of the hyperfine

More information

Optical Pumping of Rubidium

Optical Pumping of Rubidium Optical Pumping of Rubidium Practical Course M I. Physikalisches Institut Universiät zu Köln February 3, 2014 Abstract The hyperfine levels of Rubidium atoms in a sample cell are split up into their Zeeman

More information

Optical Pumping in 85 Rb and 87 Rb

Optical Pumping in 85 Rb and 87 Rb Optical Pumping in 85 Rb and 87 Rb John Prior III*, Quinn Pratt, Brennan Campbell, Kjell Hiniker University of San Diego, Department of Physics (Dated: December 14, 2015) Our experiment aimed to determine

More information

POLARIZATION OF LIGHT

POLARIZATION OF LIGHT POLARIZATION OF LIGHT OVERALL GOALS The Polarization of Light lab strongly emphasizes connecting mathematical formalism with measurable results. It is not your job to understand every aspect of the theory,

More information

arxiv: v1 [physics.atom-ph] 26 Oct 2015

arxiv: v1 [physics.atom-ph] 26 Oct 2015 APS/-QED Spatial dynamics of laser-induced fluorescence in an intense laser beam: experiment and theory in alkali metal atoms M. Auzinsh, A. Berzins, R. Ferber, F. Gahbauer, and U. Kalnins Laser Centre,

More information

Lab #13: Polarization

Lab #13: Polarization Lab #13: Polarization Introduction In this experiment we will investigate various properties associated with polarized light. We will study both its generation and application. Real world applications

More information