Cavity QED in a High NA Resonator
Danial Shadmany, Aishwarya Kumar, Anna Soper, Lukas Palm, Chuan Yin,, Henry Ando, Bowen Li, Lavanya Taneja, Matt Jaffe, David Schuster, and Jon, Simon

TL;DR
This paper introduces a high-NA lens-based cavity resonator that enhances light-matter interaction by minimizing mode size and maintaining high optical access, enabling strong coupling with single atoms for quantum applications.
Contribution
The development of a novel high-NA, lens-based resonator that approaches fundamental limits of single-photon absorption probability while allowing strong atom-photon coupling and high-fidelity detection.
Findings
Achieved strong coupling with a single 87Rb atom.
Demonstrated cavity-enhanced atom detection with 99.55% imaging fidelity.
Maintained high atom survival probability of 99.89% in 130 microseconds.
Abstract
From fundamental studies of light-matter interaction to applications in quantum networking and sensing, cavity quantum electrodynamics (QED) provides a platform-crossing toolbox to control interactions between atoms and photons. The coherence of such interactions is determined by the product of the single-pass atomic absorption and the number of photon round-trips. Reducing the cavity loss has enabled resonators supporting nearly 1-million optical roundtrips at the expense of severely limited optical material choices and increased alignment sensitivity. The single-pass absorption probability can be increased through the use of near-concentric, fiber or nanophotonic cavities, which reduce the mode waists at the expense of constrained optical access and exposure to surface fields. Here we present a new high numerical-aperture, lens-based resonator that pushes the single-atom-single-photon…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPhotonic and Optical Devices · Mechanical and Optical Resonators · Advanced Fiber Laser Technologies
