Enhancing Light-Atom Interactions via Atomic Bunching
Bonnie L. Schmittberger, Daniel J. Gauthier

TL;DR
This paper theoretically demonstrates that spatial organization of sub-Doppler-cooled two-level atoms significantly enhances light-atom nonlinear interactions, enabling single-photon nonlinearities and revealing the importance of high-order nonlinearities in ultracold atomic systems.
Contribution
It introduces a model showing how atomic bunching enhances nonlinear susceptibility, surpassing homogeneous gases, and predicts single-photon nonlinearities in ultracold atoms.
Findings
Nonlinear susceptibility scales inversely with atomic temperature.
Atomic bunching can increase nonlinearity by two orders of magnitude.
High-order nonlinearities are significant near the atomic thermal energy regime.
Abstract
There is a broad interest in enhancing the strength of light-atom interactions to the point where injecting a single photon induces a nonlinear material response. Here, we show theoretically that sub-Doppler-cooled, two-level atoms that are spatially organized by weak optical fields give rise to a nonlinear material response that is greatly enhanced beyond that attainable in a homogeneous gas. Specifically, in the regime where the intensity of the applied optical fields is much less than the off-resonant saturation intensity, we show that the third-order nonlinear susceptibility scales inversely with atomic temperature and, due to this scaling, can be two orders of magnitude larger than that of a homogeneous gas for typical experimental parameters. As a result, we predict that spatially bunched two-level atoms can exhibit single-photon nonlinearities. Our model is valid for all atomic…
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