scholarly journals Construction of a strongly coupled cavity quantum electrodynamics system with easy accessibility of single or multiple intra-cavity atoms

2014 ◽  
Vol 63 (24) ◽  
pp. 244203
Author(s):  
Wen Rui-Juan ◽  
Du Jin-Jin ◽  
Li Wen-Fang ◽  
Li Gang ◽  
Zhang Tian-Cai
2021 ◽  
Vol 41 (1) ◽  
pp. 0127001
Author(s):  
张天才 Zhang Tiancai ◽  
毋伟 Wu Wei ◽  
杨鹏飞 Yang Pengfei ◽  
李刚 Li Gang ◽  
张鹏飞 Zhang Pengfei

2014 ◽  
Vol 63 (24) ◽  
pp. 244205
Author(s):  
Li Wen-Fang ◽  
Du Jin-Jin ◽  
Wen Rui-Juan ◽  
Yang Peng-Fei ◽  
Li Gang ◽  
...  

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.


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.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
JIAN ZENG ◽  
ZHI-YUAN LI

Abstract The strongly coupled system composed of atoms, molecules, molecule aggregates, and semiconductor quantum dots embedded within an optical microcavity/nanocavity with high quality factor and/or low modal volume has become an excellent platform to study cavity quantum electrodynamics (CQED), where a prominent quantum effect called Rabi splitting can occur due to strong interaction of cavity-mode single-photon with the two-level atomic states. In this paper, we build a new quantum model that can describe the optical response of the strongly-coupled system under the action of an external probing light and the spectral lineshape. We take the Hamiltonian for the strongly-coupled photon-atom system as the unperturbed Hamiltonian H 0 and the interaction Hamiltonian of the probe light upon the coupled-system quantum states as the perturbed Hamiltonian V. The theory yields a double Lorentzian lineshape for the permittivity function, which agrees well with experimental observation of Rabi splitting in terms of spectral splitting. This quantum theory will pave the way to construct a complete understanding for the microscopic strongly-coupled system that will become an important element for quantum information processing, nano-optical integrated circuits, and polariton chemistry.


2017 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jonathan D. Breeze ◽  
Enrico Salvadori ◽  
Juna Sathian ◽  
Neil McN. Alford ◽  
Christopher W. M. Kay

2015 ◽  
Vol 13 (9) ◽  
pp. 092701-92704
Author(s):  
Xiaolin Zhong Xiaolin Zhong ◽  
Gongwei Lin Gongwei Lin ◽  
Fengxue Zhou Fengxue Zhou ◽  
Yueping Niu Yueping Niu ◽  
Shangqing Gong Shangqing Gong

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