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Open Quantum Systems Decoherence
Spatially-resolved control of fictitious magnetic fields in a cold atomic ensemble
arXiv
Authors: Adam Leszczyński, Mateusz Mazelanik, Michał Lipka, Michał Parniak, Michał Dąbrowski, Wojciech Wasilewski
Year
2017
Paper ID
2618
Status
Preprint
Abstract Read
~2 min
Abstract Words
129
Citations
N/A
Abstract
Effective and unrestricted engineering of atom-photon interactions requires precise spatially-resolved control of light beams. The significant potential of such manipulations lies in a set of disciplines ranging from solid state to atomic physics. Here we use a Zeeman-like ac-Stark shift of a shaped laser beam to perform rotations of spins with spatial resolution in a large ensemble of cold rubidium atoms. We show that inhomogeneities of light intensity are the main source of dephasing and thus decoherence, yet with proper beam shaping this deleterious effect is strongly mitigated allowing rotations of 15 rad within one spin-precession lifetime. Finally, as a particular example of a complex manipulation enabled by our scheme, we demonstrate a range of collapse-and-revival behaviours of a free-induction decay signal by imprinting comb-like patterns on the atomic ensemble.
Why This Paper Matters
- This paper contributes to the Open Quantum Systems & Decoherence research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
- It adds a 2017 reference point for readers tracking recent quantum research.
- Effective and unrestricted engineering of atom-photon interactions requires precise spatially-resolved control of light beams.
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