| Literature DB >> 26655839 |
Olivier Pinel1, Jesse L Everett1, Mahdi Hosseini1, Geoff T Campbell1, Ben C Buchler1, Ping Koy Lam1.
Abstract
Optical resonance is central to a wide range of optical devices and techniques. In an optical cavity, the round-trip length and mirror reflectivity can be chosen to optimize the circulating optical power, linewidth, and free-spectral range (FSR) for a given application. In this paper we show how an atomic spinwave system, with no physical mirrors, can behave in a manner that is analogous to an optical cavity. We demonstrate this similarity by characterising the build-up and decay of the resonance in the time domain, and measuring the effective optical linewidth and FSR in the frequency domain. Our spinwave is generated in a 20 cm long Rb gas cell, yet it facilitates an effective FSR of 83 kHz, which would require a round-trip path of 3.6 km in a free-space optical cavity. Furthermore, the spinwave coupling is controllable enabling dynamic tuning of the effective cavity parameters.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26655839 PMCID: PMC4674703 DOI: 10.1038/srep17633
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1(A) Experimental setup showing the laser system. The gradient coils are used to apply opposite sign magnetic field gradients while the DC coils tunes the center frequency of the atomic absorption. (B) The effective three-level atom addressed by the laser system. The detuning Δ is set to around 2 GHz. Comparison of the (C) spinwave resonator to a (D) ring cavity. The dimensional equivalence of our 20 cm resonator is a ring cavity with a single coupling mirror and a round trip optical path of up to 3.6 km. Our experimental scheme is analogous to sending one pulse into such a ring cavity for every two round trips the built-up pulse makes inside the cavity. The red pulses (Iin) pump fresh light into the memory (cavity) and if the phase is correct will constructively interfere into the memory (cavity). If the impedance matching is imperfect, some of this light leaks out (Itransmitted). The output pulses (Iout, blue) are withdrawn every second cycle, in the absence of an input pulse. They probe of how much light is stored in the memory (cavity). For a cavity the mirror reflectivity (RMIRROR) is fixed. The effective mirror reflectivity in the memory (RCOUPLING) may be dynamically controlled.
Figure 2Spinwave resonator time domain data.
(A) The timing scheme of the input pulses (top) and gradient switching (bottom). A pulse is incident once every full cycle of the gradient, which corresponds to every second recall period. (B) In our experimental data, most of the energy in each input pulse (red) is transmitted through the memory, which saturates the detector. Every second recall period, when no input pulse is incident, we observe successive increases in the recalled light (blue) indicating a growing spinwave in the memory cell. After about 8 recall pulses, equilibrium is established and the recalled pulses remain at a constant energy. (C) With the input pulses switched off, we observe the ring-down of the spinwave-resonator. (D) The echo power, scaled to the initial echo, demonstrating the accumulation of the spinwave for control field irradiance in descending order of final echo power, 0.7 mW.cm-2, 8.4 mW.cm-2, 13.1 mW.cm-2, 16.8 mW.cm-2, and 25.2 mW.cm-2. The lines are a guide only. (E) Equilibrium echo intensity relative to initial echo as a function of control field intensity.
Figure 3Resonator behavior of the system.
(A) Amplitude of the equilibrium echo as the control field frequency is scanned 800 kHz over 200 s, sampled every 0.12 kHz. Resonances occur when the phase matching condition is satisfied. Arrows indicate the linewidth and FSR of this spectrum. The shaded area marks the 0.99 confidence interval. (B) Free spectral range for different memory repetition rates. (C) Broadened Raman absorption through the vapor cell with one gradient coil switched on. The dip and oscillations around 1300 kHz are due to free induction decay. The shaded area indicates the range over which data were taken. (D) Linewidth of the central resonance for various control field powers. The linewidth reaches a minimum for low control field powers, where diffusion and relaxation losses dominate over coupling and scattering.