Dark-time decay of the retrieval efficiency of light stored as a Rydberg excitation in a noninteracting ultracold gas
Steffen Schmidt-Eberle, Thomas Stolz, Gerhard Rempe, Stephan D\"urr

TL;DR
This study investigates the decay of light retrieval efficiency stored as Rydberg excitations in ultracold gases, identifying key limiting factors and providing a comprehensive model applicable to various photon storage schemes.
Contribution
It presents the first detailed experimental measurement of dark-time decay of Rydberg-based light storage and develops a general model for photon retrieval efficiency in atomic ensembles.
Findings
Dark-time decay time of 30 μs for Rydberg state in free expansion
Reduced decay time of 13 μs with trapping potential on
Over 90% interference visibility for short dark times
Abstract
We study the dark-time decay of the retrieval efficiency for light stored in a Rydberg state in an ultracold gas of Rb atoms based on electromagnetically induced transparency (EIT). Using low atomic density to avoid dephasing caused by atom-atom interactions, we measure a time of 30 s for the state in free expansion. One of the dominant limitations is the combination of photon recoil and thermal atomic motion at 0.2 K. If the 1064-nm dipole trap is left on, then the time is reduced to 13 s, in agreement with a model taking differential light shifts and gravitational sag into account. To characterize how coherent the retrieved light is, we overlap it with reference light and measure the visibility of the resulting interference pattern, obtaining for short dark time. Our experimental work is accompanied by a detailed model for the…
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