High-sensitivity measurement of Rydberg population via two-photon excitation in atomic vapour using optical heterodyne detection technique
Arup Bhowmick, Dushmanta Kara, Ashok K. Mohapatra

TL;DR
This paper presents an optical heterodyne detection method for highly sensitive measurement of Rydberg atom populations in thermal vapour, achieving detection of extremely small phase shifts associated with two-photon excitation.
Contribution
The paper introduces a novel heterodyne detection technique that accurately measures Rydberg populations with high sensitivity, even in thermal vapour environments, without polarization sensitivity issues.
Findings
Achieved phase shift sensitivity of a few micro radians.
Detected Rydberg populations as low as 10^{-5}.
Demonstrated insensitivity to polarization impurities.
Abstract
We demonstrate a technique based on optical heterodyne detection to measure Rydberg population in thermal atomic vapour. The technique used a probe beam far off resonant to the D2 line of rubidium along with a reference beam with frequency offset by 800 MHz in the presence of a coupling laser that couples to Rydberg state via two-photon resonance. The polarizations of the probe, reference and coupling beams are suitably chosen such that only the probe beam goes through a non-linear phase shift due to two-photon process which is measured relative to the phase shift of the reference beam using optical heterodyne detection technique. We show that the technique has a sensitivity to measure the minimum phase shift of the order of few rad. We have used a suitable model of two-photon excitation of a 3-level atom to show that the minimum phase shift measured in our experiment corresponds…
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