Stimulated Raman adiabatic passage in physics, chemistry and beyond
Nikolay V. Vitanov, Andon A. Rangelov, Bruce W. Shore, and Klaas, Bergmann

TL;DR
STIRAP is a versatile quantum control technique enabling efficient, lossless population transfer, with widespread applications across physics, chemistry, and beyond, including recent advances and future prospects in various fields.
Contribution
This review summarizes recent developments and diverse applications of STIRAP since 2000, highlighting its expanding role in multiple scientific disciplines.
Findings
Extensive applications in atomic, molecular, and solid-state physics.
Implementation in quantum information processing and quantum gates.
Emerging prospects in optomechanics and X-ray pulse transfer.
Abstract
The technique of stimulated Raman adiabatic passage (STIRAP), which allows efficient and selective population transfer between quantum states without suffering loss due to spontaneous emission, was introduced in 1990 (Gaubatz \emph{et al.}, J. Chem. Phys. \textbf{92}, 5363, 1990). Since then STIRAP has emerged as an enabling methodology with widespread successful applications in many fields of physics, chemistry and beyond. This article reviews the many applications of STIRAP emphasizing the developments since 2000, the time when the last major review on the topic was written (Vitanov \emph{et al.}, Adv. At. Mol. Opt. Phys. \textbf{46}, 55, 2001). A brief introduction into the theory of STIRAP and the early applications for population transfer within three-level systems is followed by the discussion of several extensions to multi-level systems, including multistate chains and tripod…
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