Maximum refractive index of an atomic medium
Francesco Andreoli, Michael J. Gullans, Alexander A. High, Antoine, Browaeys, Darrick E. Chang

TL;DR
This paper investigates the maximum achievable refractive index in atomic media, revealing it is limited to about 1.7 despite the giant optical response of individual atoms, using theoretical, numerical, and renormalization group analysis.
Contribution
It introduces a novel explanation for the universal limit of refractive index in atomic media based on strong-disorder renormalization group theory and multiple scattering effects.
Findings
Maximum index limited to approximately 1.7
Near-field interactions cause inhomogeneous broadening
Resonance saturation prevents indefinite index growth
Abstract
It is interesting to observe that all optical materials with a positive refractive index have a value of index that is of order unity. Surprisingly, though, a deep understanding of the mechanisms that lead to this universal behavior seems to be lacking. Moreover, this observation is difficult to reconcile with the fact that a single, isolated atom is known to have a giant optical response, as characterized by a resonant scattering cross section that far exceeds its physical size. Here, we theoretically and numerically investigate the evolution of the optical properties of an ensemble of ideal atoms as a function of density, starting from the dilute gas limit, including the effects of multiple scattering and near-field interactions. Interestingly, despite the giant response of an isolated atom, we find that the maximum index does not indefinitely grow with increasing density, but rather…
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