학술논문

Quantum manipulation and measurement of single atoms in optical cavity QED
Document Type
Conference
Source
1998 Conference on Precision Electromagnetic Measurements Digest (Cat. No.98CH36254) Precision electromagnetic measurements Precision Electromagnetic Measurements Digest, 1998 Conference on. :298 1998
Subject
Fields, Waves and Electromagnetics
Language
Abstract
Summary form only given. Using cold atoms strongly interacting with individual photons inside a high finesse cavity, we are approaching an ideal quantum system in which both matter (internal and external degrees of freedom) and light exhibit strong quantum character and the system's coherent evolution dominates decoherence processes. With this system we have performed real-time continuous measurement of single atomic spatial trajectories. The measurement protocol involves the determination of the phase of the cavity output field, which is far-detuned from the atomic resonance to minimize the measurement back action on the center-of-mass (CM) motion. The real-time evolution of the complex field amplitude is efficiently recorded at high bandwidth and with good signal-to-noise ratio, limited respectively by the rate of coherent coupling between atom and cavity mode and the photodetection shot noise. This nearly optimal detection technique has already revealed atomic CM motion inside the cavity standing-wave field of single photons, and should eventually lead to the strong conditioning of system evolution on measurement results and the realization of quantum feedback control. Another related but independent experiment concentrates on quantum manipulation of the CM motion. Owing to the highest coherent coupling rate between cavity field and individual atoms achieved to date, the mechanical coupling between atom and cavity can be significantly larger than the kinetic energy of laser cooled atoms, even under very low cavity excitation. Indeed, evidence of mechanical light forces for intracavity photon number