Spontaneous formation of a macroscopically extended coherent state
C. Braggio, F. Chiossi, G. Carugno, A. Ortolan, G. Ruoso

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates the spontaneous formation of a macroscopic coherent state through superfluorescence in a large atomic ensemble, revealing a significant enhancement in emission rate and providing insights into collective quantum optical phenomena.
Contribution
It experimentally establishes conditions for superfluorescence in an extremely large atomic ensemble without cavity QED, showing a decay rate over a million times faster than independent emission.
Findings
Observed superfluorescence with 4×10^{12} atoms.
Measured decay rate over 1 million times faster than independent atoms.
Resolved the emission dynamics through direct intensity measurements.
Abstract
It is a straightforward result of electromagnetism that dipole oscillators radiate more strongly when they are synchronized, and that if there are dipoles, the overall emitted intensity scales with . In atomic physics, such an enhanced radiative property appears when coherence among two-level identical atoms is established, and is well-known as "superradiance" \cite{Dicke:1954aa}. In superfluorescence (SF), atomic coherence develops via a self-organisation process stemming from the common radiated field, starting from a incoherently prepared population inversion \cite{Bonifacio:1975aa}. First demonstrated in a gas \cite{Skribanowitz:1973} and later in condensed matter systems \cite{Florian:1984}, its potential is currently being investigated in the fields of ultranarrow linewidth laser development for fundamental tests in physics…
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