1,068 research outputs found
A unified framework for injury control: the public health approach and Haddon's matrix combined
Strong low-frequency quantum correlations from a four-wave mixing amplifier
We show that a simple scheme based on nondegenerate four-wave mixing in a hot
atomic vapor behaves like a near-perfect phase-insensitive optical amplifier,
which can generate bright twin beams with a measured quantum noise reduction in
the intensity difference of more than 8 dB, close to the best optical
parametric amplifiers and oscillators. The absence of a cavity makes the system
immune to external perturbations, and the strong quantum noise reduction is
observed over a large frequency range.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures. Major rewrite of the previous version. New
experimental results and further analysi
A Compact Source for Quantum Image Processing with Four-wave Mixing in Rubidium-85
We have built a compact light source for bright squeezed twin-beams at
795\,nm based on four-wave-mixing in atomic Rb vapor. With a total
optical power of 400\,mW derived from a free running diode laser and a tapered
amplifier to pump the four-wave-mixing process, we achieve 2.1\,dB intensity
difference squeezing of the twin beams below the standard quantum limit,
without accounting for losses. Squeezed twin beams generated by the type of
source presented here could be used as reference for the precise calibration of
photodetectors. Transferring the quantum correlations from the light to atoms
in order to generate correlated atom beams is another interesting prospect. In
this work we investigate the dispersion that is generated by the employed
four-wave-mixing process with respect to bandwidth and dependence on probe
detuning. We are currently using this squeezed light source to test the
transfer of spatial information and quantum correlations through media of
anomalous dispersion.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Stimulated generation of superluminal light pulses via four-wave mixing
We report on the four-wave mixing of superluminal pulses, in which both the
injected and generated pulses involved in the process propagate with negative
group velocities. Generated pulses with negative group velocities of up to
are demonstrated, corresponding to the generated pulse's peak
exiting the 1.7\,cm long medium \,ns earlier than if it had
propagated at the speed of light in vacuum, . We also show that in some
cases the seeded pulse may propagate with a group velocity larger than , and
that the generated conjugate pulse peak may exit the medium even earlier than
the amplified seed pulse peak. We can control the group velocities of the two
pulses by changing the seed detuning and the input seed power.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Generation of pulsed bipartite entanglement using four-wave mixing
Using four-wave mixing in a hot atomic vapor, we generate a pair of entangled
twin beams in the microsecond pulsed regime near the D1 line of Rb,
making it compatible with commonly used quantum memory techniques. The beams
are generated in the bright and vacuum-squeezed regimes, requiring two separate
methods of analysis, without and with local oscillators, respectively. We
report a noise reduction of up to dB below the standard quantum
limit in the pulsed regime and a level of entanglement that violates an
Einstein--Podolsky--Rosen inequality.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in New Journal Of
Physici
Squeezed Light and Entangled Images from Four-Wave-Mixing in Hot Rubidium Vapor
Entangled multi-spatial-mode fields have interesting applications in quantum
information, such as parallel quantum information protocols, quantum computing,
and quantum imaging. We study the use of a nondegenerate four-wave mixing
process in rubidium vapor at 795 nm to demonstrate generation of
quantum-entangled images. Owing to the lack of an optical resonator cavity, the
four-wave mixing scheme generates inherently multi-spatial-mode output fields.
We have verified the presence of entanglement between the multi-mode beams by
analyzing the amplitude difference and the phase sum noise using a dual
homodyne detection scheme, measuring more than 4 dB of squeezing in both cases.
This paper will discuss the quantum properties of amplifiers based on
four-wave-mixing, along with the multi mode properties of such devices.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figures. SPIE Optics and Photonics 2008 proceeding (San
Diego, CA
Sub-Natural-Linewidth Quantum Interference Features Observed in Photoassociation of a Thermal Gas
By driving photoassociation transitions we form electronically excited
molecules (Na) from ultra-cold (50-300 K) Na atoms. Using a second
laser to drive transitions from the excited state to a level in the molecular
ground state, we are able to split the photoassociation line and observe
features with a width smaller than the natural linewidth of the excited
molecular state. The quantum interference which gives rise to this effect is
analogous to that which leads to electromagnetically induced transparency in
three level atomic systems, but here one of the ground states is a
pair of free atoms while the other is a bound molecule. The linewidth is
limited primarily by the finite temperature of the atoms.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
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