scholarly journals Cavity quantum electrodynamics with quantum interference in a three-level atomic system

2017 ◽  
Vol 393 ◽  
pp. 284-288 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amitabh Joshi ◽  
Juan D. Serna
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alex Naiman ◽  
Yoel Sebbag ◽  
Eliran Talker ◽  
Yefim Barash ◽  
Liron Stern ◽  
...  

Abstract The miniaturization of atomic quantum systems and their integration into silicon microchips paves the way for a wide variety of applications in quantum computing, metrology and magnetometry. A particular interest is found in the integration of quantum entities into the micro and nanoscale photonic resonators to implement chip scale cavity quantum electrodynamics. Here we demonstrate the interaction of a chip scale micro disc resonator with thermal rubidium atoms via the evanescent field of the mode. We observe high Rabi splitting of 4 GHz in the transmission spectrum of the coupled photonic-atomic system due to collective enhancement of the coupling rate by the ensemble of hot atoms and present a theoretical model to support the measured results. This result corresponds to atom-photon cooperativity of ~ 1. Such cooperativity is the onset for quantum interference, needed for high-end chip scale quantum technologies, such as such as quantum manipulation, quantum information storage and processing, and few photon switching.


Quantum ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 5 ◽  
pp. 501
Author(s):  
Titas Chanda ◽  
Rebecca Kraus ◽  
Giovanna Morigi ◽  
Jakub Zakrzewski

Topological materials have potential applications for quantum technologies. Non-interacting topological materials, such as e.g., topological insulators and superconductors, are classified by means of fundamental symmetry classes. It is instead only partially understood how interactions affect topological properties. Here, we discuss a model where topology emerges from the quantum interference between single-particle dynamics and global interactions. The system is composed by soft-core bosons that interact via global correlated hopping in a one-dimensional lattice. The onset of quantum interference leads to spontaneous breaking of the lattice translational symmetry, the corresponding phase resembles nontrivial states of the celebrated Su-Schriefer-Heeger model. Like the fermionic Peierls instability, the emerging quantum phase is a topological insulator and is found at half fillings. Originating from quantum interference, this topological phase is found in "exact" density-matrix renormalization group calculations and is entirely absent in the mean-field approach. We argue that these dynamics can be realized in existing experimental platforms, such as cavity quantum electrodynamics setups, where the topological features can be revealed in the light emitted by the resonator.


2018 ◽  
Vol 115 (50) ◽  
pp. 12662-12667 ◽  
Author(s):  
Po-Hsun Ho ◽  
Damon B. Farmer ◽  
George S. Tulevski ◽  
Shu-Jen Han ◽  
Douglas M. Bishop ◽  
...  

In cavity quantum electrodynamics, optical emitters that are strongly coupled to cavities give rise to polaritons with characteristics of both the emitters and the cavity excitations. We show that carbon nanotubes can be crystallized into chip-scale, two-dimensionally ordered films and that this material enables intrinsically ultrastrong emitter–cavity interactions: Rather than interacting with external cavities, nanotube excitons couple to the near-infrared plasmon resonances of the nanotubes themselves. Our polycrystalline nanotube films have a hexagonal crystal structure, ∼25-nm domains, and a 1.74-nm lattice constant. With this extremely high nanotube density and nearly ideal plasmon–exciton spatial overlap, plasmon–exciton coupling strengths reach 0.5 eV, which is 75% of the bare exciton energy and a near record for room-temperature ultrastrong coupling. Crystallized nanotube films represent a milestone in nanomaterials assembly and provide a compelling foundation for high-ampacity conductors, low-power optical switches, and tunable optical antennas.


2006 ◽  
Vol 69 (5) ◽  
pp. 1325-1382 ◽  
Author(s):  
Herbert Walther ◽  
Benjamin T H Varcoe ◽  
Berthold-Georg Englert ◽  
Thomas Becker

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