Dresden 2011 – scientific programme
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Q: Fachverband Quantenoptik und Photonik
Q 57: Poster 3: Quantengase, Ultrakalte Atome, Ultrakalte Moleküle, Materiewellen Optik, Präzisionsmessungen, Metrologie
Q 57.51: Poster
Thursday, March 17, 2011, 16:30–19:30, P1
Control of refractive index and motion of a single atom by quantum interference — •René Reimann1, Wolfgang Alt1, Stefan Brakhane1, Martin Eckstein1,2, Tobias Kampschulte1, Miguel Martinez-Dorantes1, Artur Widera1,3, and Dieter Meschede1 — 1Institut für Angewandte Physik der Universität Bonn, Wegelerstr. 8, 53115 Bonn — 2Max-Born-Institut, Abteilung A2, Max-Born-Str. 2 A, 12489 Berlin — 3Fachbereich Physik der TU Kaiserslautern, Erwin-Schrödinger-Str., 67663 Kaiserslautern
The properties of an optically probed atomic medium can be changed dramatically by coherent interaction with a near-resonant control light field. We will present our experimental results on the elementary case of electromagnetically induced transparency (EIT) with a single neutral atom inside an optical cavity probed by a weak field [1]. We have observed modification of the dispersive and absorptive properties of a single atom by changing the frequency of the control light field in the off-resonant regime.
In this regime, the creation of a transparency window close to a narrow absorption peak can give rise to a sub-Doppler cooling mechanism. We have observed strong cooling and heating effects in the vicinity of the two-photon resonance. The cooling increases the storage time of our atoms twenty-fold to about 16 seconds. Recent investigations of this effect outside the cavity using microwave sideband spectroscopy have revealed that a large fraction of atoms is cooled to the axial ground state of the trap.
[1] T. Kampschulte et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 105, 153603 (2010)