Threshold studies for a hot beam superradiant laser including an atomic guiding potential
Martin Fasser, Christoph Hotter, David Plankensteiner, Helmut Ritsch

TL;DR
This study numerically investigates the threshold conditions and output power of a superradiant laser using a thermal atomic beam, emphasizing the effects of temperature, atomic filtering, and guiding on laser performance.
Contribution
It provides detailed numerical analysis of threshold scaling, the impact of velocity filtering and guiding, and quantifies atom-atom and atom-field correlations in a superradiant laser setup.
Findings
Higher atom numbers increase temperature threshold.
Velocity filtering has minimal impact on phase perturbations.
Atomic guiding significantly lowers threshold and boosts photon output.
Abstract
Recent theoretical predictions hint at an implementation of a superradiant laser based on narrow optical clock transitions by using a filtered thermal beam at high density. Corresponding numerical studies give encouraging results but the required very high densities are sensitive to beam collimation errors and inhomogeneous shifts. Here we present extensive numerical studies of threshold conditions and the predicted output power of such a superradiant laser involving realistic particle numbers and velocities along the cavity axis. Detailed studies target the threshold scaling as a function of temperature as well as the influence of eliminating the hottest part of the atomic distribution via velocity filtering and the benefits of additional atomic beam guiding. Using a cumulant expansion approach allows us to quantify the significance of atom-atom and atom-field correlations in such…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCold Atom Physics and Bose-Einstein Condensates · Advanced Frequency and Time Standards · Quantum optics and atomic interactions
