Optical magnetism and wavefront control by arrays of strontium atoms
K. E. Ballantine, D. Wilkowski, and J. Ruostekoski

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates how arrays of strontium atoms in optical lattices can be engineered to exhibit optical magnetism and multipole responses, enabling advanced wavefront control and beam shaping through collective atomic excitations.
Contribution
It introduces a scheme to harness cooperative electromagnetic modes in Sr atom arrays for near-perfect wavefront shaping and polarization control of transmitted light.
Findings
Achieved nearly complete $2 ext{pi}$ phase control of transmitted light.
Realized beam steering and topological polarization textures.
Demonstrated collective magnetic response at optical frequencies.
Abstract
By analyzing the parameters of electronic transitions, we show how bosonic Sr atoms in planar optical lattices can be engineered to exhibit optical magnetism and other higher-order electromagnetic multipoles that can be harnessed for wavefront control of incident light. Resonant m light for the transition mediates cooperative interactions between the atoms while the atoms are trapped in a deeply subwavelength optical lattice. The atoms then exhibit collective excitation eigenmodes, e.g., with a strong cooperative magnetic response at optical frequencies, despite individual atoms having negligible coupling to the magnetic component of light. We provide a detailed scheme to utilize excitations of such cooperative modes consisting of arrays of electromagnetic multipoles to form an atomic Huygens' surface, with complete phase control…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCold Atom Physics and Bose-Einstein Condensates · Orbital Angular Momentum in Optics · Quantum optics and atomic interactions
