Storing and processing optical information with ultraslow light in Bose-Einstein condensates
Abstract
We theoretically explore coherent information transfer between ultraslow light pulses and Bose-Einstein condensates (BEC’s) and find that storing light pulses in BEC’s allows the coherent condensate dynamics to process optical information. We consider BEC’s of alkali atoms with a Λ energy level configuration. In this configuration, one laser (the coupling field) can cause a pulse of a second pulsed laser (the probe field) to propagate with little attenuation (electromagnetically induced transparency) at a very slow group velocity (∼10m/s) and be spatially compressed to lengths smaller than the BEC. These pulses can be fully stopped and later revived by switching the coupling field off and on. Here we develop a formalism, applicable in both the weak- and strong-probe regimes, to analyze such experiments and establish several results: (1) We show that the switching can be performed on time scales much faster than the adiabatic time scale for electromagnetically induced transparancy even in the strong-probe regime. We also study the behavior of the system changes when this time scale is faster than the excited state lifetime. (2) Stopped light pulses write their phase and amplitude information onto spatially dependent atomic wave functions, resulting in coherent two-component BEC dynamics during long storage times. We investigate examples relevant to Rb87 experimental parameters and see a variety of novel dynamics occur, including interference fringes, gentle breathing excitations, and two-component solitons, depending on the relative scattering lengths of the atomic states used and the probe to coupling intensity ratio. We find that the dynamics when the levels ∣F=1,MF=-1⟩ and ∣F=2,MF=+1⟩ are used could be well suited to designing controlled processing of the information input on the probe. (3) Switching the coupling field on after the dynamics writes the evolved BEC wave functions density and phase features onto a revived probe pulse, which then propagates out. We establish equations linking the BEC wave function to the resulting output probe pulses in both the strong- and weak-probe regimes. We then identify sources of deviations from these equations due to absorption and distortion of the pulses. These deviations result in imperfect fidelity of the information transfer from the atoms to the light fields and we calculate this fidelity for Gaussian-shaped features in the BEC wave functions. In the weak-probe case, we find that the fidelity is affected both by absorption of very-small-length-scale features and absorption of features occupying regions near the condensate edge. We discuss how to optimize the fidelity using these considerations. In the strong-probe case, we find that when the oscillator strengths for the two transitions are equal the fidelity is not strongly sensitive to the probe strength, while when they are unequal the fidelity is worse for stronger probes. Applications to distant communication between BEC’s, squeezed light generation, and quantum information are anticipated.
- Publication:
-
Physical Review A
- Pub Date:
- November 2004
- DOI:
- 10.1103/PhysRevA.70.053831
- arXiv:
- arXiv:quant-ph/0404018
- Bibcode:
- 2004PhRvA..70e3831D
- Keywords:
-
- 42.50.Gy;
- 03.75.Kk;
- 03.67.-a;
- Effects of atomic coherence on propagation absorption and amplification of light;
- electromagnetically induced transparency and absorption;
- Dynamic properties of condensates;
- collective and hydrodynamic excitations superfluid flow;
- Quantum information;
- Quantum Physics;
- Condensed Matter - Soft Condensed Matter
- E-Print:
- 19 pages, 12 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev. A