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Transient Theory of Cavity Spontaneous Emission

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Atoms in cavity can put energy into the field and it can be re ... b = b( ) b(-) and b(-) = adjoint( b( ) ) Since we want explicit time-dependent solutions ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Transient Theory of Cavity Spontaneous Emission


1
Transient Theory of Cavity Spontaneous Emission
  • Chris Takacs
  • Physics 215C Quantum Presentation
  • June 11th, 2009

2
Quantizing the Fields in Cavities
  • Identical to what we did in class except now L
    remains finite
  • Excludes certain modes
  • Atoms in cavity can put energy into the field and
    it can be re-absorbed later.
  • In vacuum, this doesnt happen.
  • Atom to Cavity coupling dependent on emission
    wavelength being close to a cavity mode.

L
L
Hydrogen Atom in a Cavity of dimension L
3
Experimental Reality
  • Lets say we are dealing with a Hydrogen atom
    decaying spontaneously from the first excited
    state into the ground state.
  • This corresponds to a 10.4eV photon with
    wavelength 120nm
  • This is a physically accessible length-scale
    phenomena for experimental physics (No Strings
    required)
  • Strong effect in high-Q / small optical resonator
    cavities
  • Diode lasers
  • Micromasers
  • Even changes spontaneous emission rate of atoms
    near a single mirror

4
Jaynes-Cummings Model
  • Can be used to describe an atom radiating inside
    a cavity
  • Solvable model describing interaction of a
    2-level system with a single-mode harmonic
    oscillator
  • Very general problem applicable in many areas
  • Developed by Electrical Engineers

5
Jaynes-Cummings Model
of Photons in Field
Occupation of the atomic states
Coupling between the field and atomic states
6
Jaynes-Cummings Model
  • This was a HW problem. It generalizes to a
    2-level system with off-diagonal terms
  • Solution is Rabi Oscillations with frequency
  • Detuning of field and cavity energies determines
    amplitude of oscillations
  • The classical analog of this is a harmonic
    oscillator (Field) being driven (Atom) at some
    frequency

7
Shortcomings of the JCM
  • Developed by Electrical Engineers
  • Not much physical content
  • A phenomenological model
  • Doesnt take into account finite speed of light
  • Instantaneous interactions with the field
  • Atom cannot immediately dump energy into the
    field
  • Thought of in terms of normal modes which are
    standing wave solutions
  • The atom does not know it is in a cavity!
  • We should be able to think of this problem in
    terms of retarded waves

8
Expected Behavior of Transient Cavity Spontaneous
Emission
  • Fix the atom at the center of a spherical cavity
  • Q infinity
  • At t0, put atom into excited state
  • Atomic dipole starts radiating at the free-space
    rate

9
Expected Behavior of Transient Cavity Spontaneous
Emission
tau/2
  • Cavity roundtrip time tau 2 R /c
  • At tau/2, the radiation reaches the walls.
  • The walls exactly radiate a wave inwards to
    exactly satisfy the boundary condition

tau/4
10
Expected Behavior of Transient Cavity Spontaneous
Emission
  • At t tau, the radiated wave finally reaches the
    atom
  • This modifies the emission rate
  • Depending on the phase of the reflected wave
    relative to the emitting dipole
  • Process repeats and we see Rabi Oscillations
    after some number of roundtrips

11
The Hamiltonian
  • Ha is the atomic Hamiltonian
  • We will turn this into a 2-level system like JCM
  • p is the momentum of coulomb interaction of the
    electron
  • Hf is the free-field Hamiltonian
  • This is for all of free space. Not just cavity
    modes
  • A is the usual Vector potential in the Coulomb
    gauge
  • Note that the interaction only takes place at the
    origin where we consider the atom to be
  • The () / (-) operator extracts the
    positive/negative frequency components
  • Positive frequencies are terms like exp(-i w t)
    and Negative frequencies go as exp(i w t)
  • Makes some simplifications transparent but clumsy
    when first looking at it
  • b b() b(-) and b(-) adjoint( b() )
  • Since we want explicit time-dependent solutions
  • Work in Heisenberg picture
  • Abuse the Heisenberg equations of motion
  • Make a lot of approximations along the way!

12
The Vector Potential
  • This is the simplified form of the vector
    potential
  • p has an exact solution given some reasonable
    approximations
  • First part is responsible for free-space
    radiation.
  • Second part is the radiation emitted by the atom
    at earlier times.
  • These are proportional to the acceleration of
    the electron.
  • With this expression and the Heisenberg equations
    of motion we can solve for the Electric field and
    Excited State Population

13
Numerical Solutions to Equations of Motion for
E(r,t)2
  • Atom is in resonance with the 10th mode of the
    cavity
  • Left is t tau/4
  • Emission is at free-space rate
  • Right is t tau/2

14
Numerical Solutions to Equations of Motion for
E(r,t)2
  • Left is t (3 / 4) tau
  • We see that boundary reflection causes
    interference with earlier wave
  • Right is t tau
  • This is the first point when the electric field
    at the origin changes

15
Numerical Solutions to Equations of Motion for
E(r,t)2
  • Left is t (5 / 4) tau
  • Right is t (6/4) tau

16
Numerical Solutions of Excited State Population
TR
2 TR
0
17
Numerical Solutions of Excited State Population
TR ( 10 tau)
2 TR
0
18
Numerical Solutions of Excited State Population
Detuned Cavity
TR
2 TR
3 TR
0
19
Transient Theory vs. JCM
Tuned to 10th Mode
Slightly Detuned from 10th Mode
Numerical Solutions
JCM
20
Limits of the Transient Theory
  • Can be modified to include cavity losses
  • As the number of roundtrips per Rabi period
    becomes large, the transient theory converges to
    the JCM
  • Authors claim this is not unique
  • Multimode corrections are interesting but can be
    mostly ignored in practice
  • Setting up an experiment where the kinky nature
    of the oscillations is detectable would be
    difficult
  • Light travels 0.3 m / ns
  • Need very large, high-Q cavity

21
Conclusions
  • Transient Theory gives nice physical
    interpretation
  • Transient Theory agrees well with JCM
  • JCM is more useful tool in both experiment and
    theory
  • Elegant and often exactly solvable
  • Designed by Electrical Engineers
  • Engineers win!

22
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23
The Vector Potential
  • Similar to the vector potential of the free-field
    we solved in class EXCEPT we get an additional
    term related to the mechanical momentum
  • The equations of motion for ak(t) can be
    formally integrated to give
  • Where ak(0) is as the lowering operator
  • Summing over the polarization and integrating
    over wavevectors up to some cutoff wavevector we
    get an expression for the vector potential

24
The Vector Potential (continued)
  • We modify the Vector Potential to include
    radiation reflected at the walls with the
    expression K(t t)
  • K(t- t) acts as a series of delta-functions
  • n0 corresponds to the mode closest to being in
    resonance with the Cavity
  • M is the number of modes we are including around
    n0
  • For this plot, the atom is in resonance with the
    10th cavity mode

25
The Atomic Hamiltonian
  • We specialize to a 2-level system and write it in
    terms of atomic transition operators e is
    excited and g is ground state.
  • Not Pauli-spin matrices
  • p represents the Coulomb interaction of the
    electron.
  • Not perturbed by either the vector potential or
    the vacuum field to zeroth-order
  • We can then write down the solution for the time
    dependence of p

where matrix at t0 is one at (i, j) and
zero everywhere else
  • This is the key starting point and allows us to
    generate solutions for the other operators
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