Emergent and broken symmetries of atomic self-organization arising from Gouy phase shifts in multimode cavity QED
Yudan Guo, Varun D. Vaidya, Ronen M. Kroeze, Rhiannon A. Lunney,, Benjamin L. Lev, and Jonathan Keeling

TL;DR
This paper provides a theoretical and experimental study of atomic self-organization in multimode optical cavities, highlighting the role of Gouy phase shifts, emergent U(1)-symmetry, and how cavity geometry influences atom-photon interactions.
Contribution
It introduces a theoretical framework accounting for Gouy phase shifts in multimode cavities and demonstrates how cavity geometry and pumping schemes can control symmetry and interactions.
Findings
Gouy phase shifts significantly affect atom-photon interactions.
Emergence of U(1)-symmetry in atomic density waves.
Cavity geometry and pumping schemes can restore or break symmetry.
Abstract
Optical cavities can induce photon-mediated interactions among intracavity-trapped atoms. Multimode cavities provide the ability to tune the form of these interactions, e.g., by inducing a nonlocal, sign-changing term to the interaction. By accounting for the Gouy phase shifts of the modes in a nearly degenerate, confocal, Fabry-Perot cavity, we provide a theoretical description of this interaction, along with additional experimental confirmation to complement that presented in the companion paper, Ref. [1]. Furthermore, we show that this interaction should be written in terms of a complex order parameter, allowing for a U(1)-symmetry to emerge. This symmetry corresponds to the phase of the atomic density wave arising from self-organization when the cavity is transversely pumped above a critical threshold power. We theoretically and experimentally show how this phase depends on the…
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