Short-pulse cross-phase modulation in an electromagnetically-induced-transparency medium
Amir Feizpour, Greg Dmochowski, Aephraim M. Steinberg

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that narrow EIT windows can significantly enhance the detectability of cross-phase modulation by prolonging the phase shift duration, even if the peak phase shift saturates, enabling more sensitive optical measurements.
Contribution
It provides analytical models showing how narrow EIT windows increase the integrated phase shift for short pulses, improving phase shift detectability in EIT-based nonlinear optics.
Findings
Integrated phase shift grows linearly with EIT window narrowing.
Peak phase shift saturates with narrower windows.
Optimal detection occurs with broadband, detuned short pulses.
Abstract
Electromagnetically-induced transparency (EIT) has been proposed as a way to greatly enhance cross-phase modulation, with the possibility of leading to few-photon-level optical nonlinearities. This enhancement grows as the transparency window width, \Delta_EIT, is narrowed. Decreasing \Delta_EIT, however, increases the response time of the effect, suggesting that for pulses of a given duration, there could be a fundamental limit to the strength of the nonlinearity. We show that in the regimes of most practical interest - narrow EIT windows perturbed by short signal pulses- the enhancement offered by EIT is not only in the magnitude of the nonlinear phase shift but in fact also in its increased duration. That is, for the case of signal pulses much shorter (temporally) than the inverse EIT bandwidth, the narrow window serves to prolong the effect of the passing signal pulse, leading to an…
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