Literature DB >> 31092923

Cavity quantum electrodynamics with atom-like mirrors.

Mohammad Mirhosseini1,2,3, Eunjong Kim1,2,3, Xueyue Zhang1,2,3, Alp Sipahigil1,2,3, Paul B Dieterle1,2,3, Andrew J Keller1,2,3, Ana Asenjo-Garcia3,4,5,6, Darrick E Chang5,7, Oskar Painter8,9,10.   

Abstract

It has long been recognized that atomic emission of radiation is not an immutable property of an atom, but is instead dependent on the electromagnetic environment1 and, in the case of ensembles, also on the collective interactions between the atoms2-6. In an open radiative environment, the hallmark of collective interactions is enhanced spontaneous emission-super-radiance2-with non-dissipative dynamics largely obscured by rapid atomic decay7. Here we observe the dynamical exchange of excitations between a single artificial atom and an entangled collective state of an atomic array9 through the precise positioning of artificial atoms realized as superconducting qubits8 along a one-dimensional waveguide. This collective state is dark, trapping radiation and creating a cavity-like system with artificial atoms acting as resonant mirrors in the otherwise open waveguide. The emergent atom-cavity system is shown to have a large interaction-to-dissipation ratio (cooperativity exceeding 100), reaching the regime of strong coupling, in which coherent interactions dominate dissipative and decoherence effects. Achieving strong coupling with interacting qubits in an open waveguide provides a means of synthesizing multi-photon dark states with high efficiency and paves the way for exploiting correlated dissipation and decoherence-free subspaces of quantum emitter arrays at the many-body level10-13.

Entities:  

Year:  2019        PMID: 31092923     DOI: 10.1038/s41586-019-1196-1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nature        ISSN: 0028-0836            Impact factor:   49.962


  3 in total

1.  A subradiant optical mirror formed by a single structured atomic layer.

Authors:  Jun Rui; David Wei; Antonio Rubio-Abadal; Simon Hollerith; Johannes Zeiher; Dan M Stamper-Kurn; Christian Gross; Immanuel Bloch
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2020-07-15       Impact factor: 49.962

2.  Intermittent decoherence blockade in a chiral ring environment.

Authors:  Salvatore Lorenzo; Stefano Longhi; Albert Cabot; Roberta Zambrini; Gian Luca Giorgi
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2021-06-18       Impact factor: 4.379

3.  Light-Matter Response in Nonrelativistic Quantum Electrodynamics.

Authors:  Johannes Flick; Davis M Welakuh; Michael Ruggenthaler; Heiko Appel; Angel Rubio
Journal:  ACS Photonics       Date:  2019-10-02       Impact factor: 7.529

  3 in total

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