Abstract
Slow light has received growing interest since 1999 when the propagation velocity of light was reduced in an experiment to 17 m/s, i.e. almost 20 million times slower than in vacuum. Two years later light pulses were stopped, or more specifically stored in an atomic medium and subsequently released after some time. This provided the basis for important applications in photon-based quantum information technology. The present chapter explains what slow light is and what it is good for, how to understand the physics of it and how one can practically make light go so slow. To answer these questions, the chapter uses simple pictures, on the one hand, and supplements them with a little bit of details, on the other hand, for those who want to go slightly deeper into the field. The chapter also discusses more recent generalizations of slow light, such as stationary and spinor slow light which are interesting model system and can be used to understand more complex quantum systems.
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1 Introduction
Since the experiments of Michelson and Morely and their brilliant explanation by Albert Einstein more than 100 years ago which have laid the foundation for the theory of relativity, we know that light propagates in empty space with the largest possible velocity. This speed of about 300,000 km/s is so fast that we can have a phone conversation around the globe without noticing that an electromagnetic signal has to be transmitted for every bit of information. When we look through a window or a prism of quartz we see that light gets refracted. Refraction is due to the fact that light propagates in a transparent medium at a slightly lower speed than allowed by the universal traffic laws of nature. This speed, called phase velocity depends on the color of light and the variation of the phase velocity in media, is what causes the beauty of a rainbow or the bright fan of colors produced by a prism. Yet the change of the velocity of light in water, in glass or even in diamond is small, it is typically less than a factor of 2. But what if this factor is 107, a ten with 6 extra zeros, i.e. 10,000,000? Such light can truly be called ultra slow. As opposed to propagation faster than the vacuum speed of light, this is not forbidden by Einstein’s theory of relativity, but for a long time did not seem feasible. It did so until the late 1980s and early 1990s, when Steve Harris from Stanford University pointed out that an effect he termed electromagnetically induced transparency (EIT) [1, 2] can lead to a massive reduction of the effective speed of pulsed light [3]. When we talk about ‘slow’ light we talk about the speed of pulses of light, called group velocity, which needs to be distinguished from the phase velocity mentioned above.
Although a number of experiments have seen evidence of velocity reduction in EIT media, it took until 1999 [4–6] that slow light received a great deal of attention. In 1998 the group of Lene Hau at the Rowland Institute for Science together with Steve Harris managed to decelerate the propagation of light in an atomic gas to 17 m/s, i.e. almost 20 million times slower than in vacuum. The cover page of the journal Nature (Fig. 15.1), where this experiment was published in 1999, illustrates the achievement showing that a trained cyclist could even outrace such a light pulse. This is of course only a figurative way to demonstrate how slow the light was compared to the usual. Actually there was no cyclist involved in the experiment. The light was propagating in a tiny cloud of ultracold atoms contained in a vacuum chamber over a very small distance, as one can see by closer inspection of the figure. This spectacular result then triggered a rapidly growing activity in the field leading to many fascinating applications.
So, what is slow light and what is it good for? How can we understand the physics of it and how can we practically make light go so slow? These are the questions we want to answer in the following using simple pictures, on the one hand, and supplementing them with a little bit of details, on the other hand, for those who want to go slightly deeper. Yet we will avoid math as much as possible and refer those who seek more detailed information to the specialized literature [7–11].
2 Slow Light, Stopped Light and Stationary Light: A Simple Picture
How can one slow down light to such extremely low velocities? Imagine a fast racing car (Fig. 15.2). If a heavy trailer is attached to the car, its engine has now also to pull the trailer. This slows down the car considerably. Something similar happens with light in a specially arranged atomic medium used in EIT experiments. Light is composed of photons—tiny particles which are very fast, so one can visualize them as fast racing cars. When entering the atomic medium, most of the photons are converted into a special kind of atomic excitations (which we here call spin excitations) which cannot move on their own, and thus behave like heavy trailers. The atomic excitations generated in this way are coupled to the small number of remaining photons which have to pull a vast number of immobile spin excitations while travelling in the medium. In this way, the propagation of the whole pulse of light is slowed down dramatically. The possibility to convert ‘fast cars’ into ‘immobile trailers’ is a small, but important difference to usual cars and trailers we encounter in real life. When the crawling light pulse reaches the end of the medium, the atomic excitations (trailers) are converted back to photons (fast cars), so the light exiting the medium becomes fast again.
Now imagine that the number of photons converted into atomic excitations (i.e. fast cars converted into trailers) can somehow be increased at will. This means there is an even lesser number of remaining cars to pull the whole bunch of trailers. And now imagine further that the conversion between cars and trailers can be changed while the fast cars are going through the trailer park. What if all of them are converted and no racing car is left to pull? The pulse would stop! This is the essence of stopped, or more precisely stored light, theoretically predicted in [12] and soon after experimentally verified in [13, 14]. The important difference of this kind of light storing and using a black piece of paper, which just absorbs the light, is that here the information carried by the photons is still present in the medium, in our analogy in the form of heavy trailers. Thus in principle all information about the original photons stored in the atomic excitations (trailers) can be converted back into photons (fast cars) either completely or in part. When the slow-light pulse reaches the end of the medium, the atomic excitations can no longer be dragged along and are fully converted back into light. In this way the stored light pulse can be fully retrieved.
Light storage is of particular interest in information technology especially in quantum information science. Light is an ideal carrier of information be it classical information which we use in every-day life or be it quantum information which may encounter at some day in a quantum network. Yet in the second case it is rather difficult to store information without loosing the quantum character, referred to as quantum coherence. Here light storage is an extremely useful method to build what is called a quantum memory for light. In fact first proof-of-principle demonstrations of quantum memories for photons based on light storage have already been made in a number of labs [15, 16].
It is noteworthy that by storing a light pulse all its photons (i.e. all the racing cars) are converted into immobile atomic excitations (trailers). Yet there is another way to make photons immobile where the photons are still present in the medium. This is called stationary light. It is formed when two counter-propagating pulses of light are driving the same spin excitations of a properly prepared atomic medium [17–21]. This corresponds to having two types of racing cars, one going from the left to the right, and another one from the right to the left. Both types of cars are trying to pull the same immobile trailers in opposite directions, as illustrated in Fig. 15.3. The forces compensate, so the cars and the trailers remain at rest. More precisely stationary light behaves like massive quantum particles with zero average velocity. Note that in the quantum world physical quantities such as the particle velocity fluctuate and thus we need to talk about averages here.
One can also produce a situation where two counter-propagating pulses of light drive different spin excitations of the atomic medium. If the two types of spin excitations are coupled to each other in the right way, two-component slow light is formed which has a more complex structure resembling what is known in quantum physics as a particle with a spin degree of freedom [22–25]. This is like having two types of racing cars going in opposite directions, each pulling different types of trailers, as shown in Fig. 15.4. If the trailers were not coupled to each other, the two types of cars would slowly move in opposite directions pulling their respective trailers independently from each other. Yet if there is a coupling between the two sorts of trailers, the oppositely moving cars and trailers influence each other, making a more complex dynamics, resembling that of a relativistic quantum particle.
3 A Microscopic Picture of Light Propagation in a Medium
In order to understand the mechanism behind slow light we first have to talk about the microscopic physics of light propagation in a medium. In particular we will discuss what the physical origin of absorption and refraction is, two phenomena which we are familiar with in every-day life.
3.1 Absorption, Emission and Refraction
Light is nothing else than an electromagnetic wave build up from oscillating electric and magnetic fields. The color of light is determined by the oscillation frequency \( \omega =2\pi \slash T \), given by the inverse of the temporal period T of oscillations. The electric field of a plane wave propagating along say the x axis of some coordinate system has a sinusoidal form depicted in Fig. 15.5. It is characterized by the frequency ω, and a corresponding wavelength \( \lambda \), which is the spatial period of the wave. This can be written in the following form:
where we have introduced the phase ϕ. The propagation velocity of such a wave can be found by asking: What is the position change Δx in a time Δt for a fixed value of the phase ϕ? One finds: \( c=\varDelta x\slash \varDelta t=\omega \lambda \slash 2\pi \), which is called the phase velocity.
Light carries energy, which, as figured out first by Max Planck in 1900, comes in quantized units. So a beam of light is composed of particles called photons. The amount of energy E contained in each of these photons is proportional to the oscillation frequency ω, i.e. it depends on the color, \( E=\hslash \omega \), where the constant \( \hslash \) entering here is the famous Planck constant. High-frequency photons, such as those of ultra-violet light or even X-rays, are very energetic, while low-frequency photons such as infrared light or microwaves, which we cannot see with our eyes, do contain much less energy per photon.
Matter, on the other hand, consists of atoms, which according to the laws of quantum mechanics have a number of states characterized by discrete energies. Very often it is sufficient to consider only two or three most relevant states. Atoms are also small quantum oscillators which can ‘vibrate’ at different frequencies corresponding to the energy differences between quantum states \( {\omega}_{ab}=\left({E}_a-{E}_b\right)\slash \hslash \). Many (but not all) of these ‘vibration’ modes are associated with an oscillating electric dipole. In this way an atom can absorb or emit radiation just like an antenna of a mobile phone. As we shall see later on, photons play the role of the fast racing cars described in the introductory section, whereas properly prepared atoms absorbing the photons play the role of the heavy trailers. When an atom absorbs a photon it changes its quantum state from the low-energy state to the high-energy state (see Fig. 15.6) and vice versa if it emits a photon.
There are actually two types of emission of an excited atom. The most common is spontaneous emission, where a photon is emitted in a random direction leading to the loss of information on the state, the propagation direction and the polarization of the photon that excited the atom in the first place, see Fig. 15.7a. The other one is stimulated emission which takes place in the presence of other identical photons and is pointed into the direction determined by these photons, see Fig. 15.7b. In addition to spontaneous emission there are a number of other relaxation processes for excited states in atoms. As a consequence of these processes and due to spontaneous emission, excited atomic states decay with some rate γ. Thus when light shines on a cloud of atoms or atoms arranged in a crystal, it can be absorbed by exciting some of the atoms into high-energy states which subsequently decay. Clearly how much a medium absorbs depends on the density of atoms, which in a gas is much less than, e.g., in a solid.
Still, why is it that some solids like diamond are transparent to visible light and others like coal are pitch black? Both are just slightly different forms of carbon and their density does not differ significantly. The reason is simple: In order for a photon to be efficiently absorbed, its frequency has to be close to the frequency of the atomic oscillator, i.e. the frequency should correspond more or less to the energy difference between some lower and higher state \( {\omega}_{ab}=\left({E}_a-{E}_b\right)\slash \hslash \). When this is the case, one talks about resonance. If the photon frequency is very different from any of the vibration frequencies of the atomic oscillator, i.e. if the light is off-resonant, not much can happen. It is like if you are trying to make a bridge vibrate by jumping up and down but are doing it at the wrong pace. Only a tiny bit of the photon energy is transferred to the atom, stored there for a very little moment and then is reemitted into the stream of photons. In this process the atom is actually not completely transferred from the lower-energy state to the higher-energy state, as in Fig. 15.6, and the subsequent emission process is a bit different from the stimulated process shown in Fig. 15.7b, but in essence it is like this. A word of caution is needed here: This picture of absorption is a bit of an oversimplification if applied to solids rather than to sparse atomic gases. The quantum states and energies in a solid are not the same than those of isolated atoms as they are affected by atom–atom interactions. Also even off-resonant transitions can eventually lead to sizable absorption if there are very many of them.
As we have mentioned before, waves are characterized by a wavelength \( \lambda \), which gives the spatial period of a wave and is directly related to the frequency. In vacuum the relation between the two is \( {\lambda}_0=2\pi {c}_0\slash \omega \). Here c 0 is the vacuum speed of light, i.e. the fastest velocity allowed by the laws of nature. In a medium this relation is changed, however. The short moment for which the photon is stored in the atom causes a delay. The effect of the very many, tiny delays at every atom in the medium makes light appear to propagate with a modified phase velocity
Here n(ω) is called the refractive index. In vacuum the refractive index is unity. The name ‘refractive index’ stems from the fact that it characterizes the refraction of light beams at an interface between say air and a piece of glass, as illustrated in Fig. 15.8. Refraction comes about since along with the change of the phase velocity of a plane wave at frequency ω comes a change of the wavelength \( \lambda ={\lambda}_0\slash n\left(\omega \right) \). This is because the frequency of the wave remains the same in the medium, giving \( \omega =2\pi {c}_0\slash {\lambda}_0=2\pi c\slash \lambda \).
The influence of a medium on the propagation of light is characterized by the susceptibility χ. In Fig. 15.9 we have plotted both the absorption strength (red line) represented by the imaginary part of the susceptibility \( Im\left[\chi \right]=\chi^{\prime\prime}\left(\omega \right) \) together with its real part \( Re\left[\chi \right]=\chi^{\prime}\left(\omega \right) \) (blue line) as function of the frequency in the vicinity of an atomic resonance frequency ω ab . The latter \( \chi^{\prime } \) describes the deviation of the index of refraction from unity, \( n=1+\chi^{\prime}\slash 2 \). One recognizes that the absorption peaks on resonance and falls off quickly with increasing frequency mismatch \( \varDelta =\omega -{\omega}_{ab} \), called detuning. The refractive index has a bit more complicated anti-symmetric shape. For frequencies above the resonance, ω > ω ab , the medium leads to a reduction of the refractive index with respect to the background value, while below resonance, ω < ω ab , the refractive index is enhanced. One notices the following from the figure: For large values of |Δ| the refractive index falls off much slower than the absorption, so for far off-resonant light only refractive effects of the medium matter. This is why even transparent media can still have a strong effect on the propagation of light. One of these effects is the refraction of a light beam at an interface between two media with different refractive indices. Another one is the modification of the propagation velocity of pulses, discussed in the following subsection.
3.2 Group Velocity
We have seen that the dependence of the refractive index on the frequency leads to different wavelength of light in a transparent medium as compared to free space. This dependence has another equally important effect, it determines the effective propagation speed of photon wavepackets. As illustrated in Fig. 15.10, one needs to superpose light waves with slightly different wavelength in order to create a wavepacket, i.e. a light pulse of finite length. In some sense we can envision photons as such wavepackets.
What is the propagation speed of such a wavepacket which consists of plane waves of different frequencies? In vacuum all frequency components propagate at the fundamental speed of light c 0, so wavepackets made of plane waves also propagate at this speed. But what about a medium, where each component has a different phase velocity \( c\left(\omega \right)={c}_0\slash n\left(\omega \right) \)? It turns out that the slightly different phase velocities of each constituting plane wave cause the envelope of the pulse to move at the so-called group velocity v gr which can be very different from the phase velocity \( c={c}_0\slash n\left(\omega \right) \). It is given by
where ω 0 is the average frequency of the different components. The group velocity determines the effective speed of photons in a medium. When we talk about slow light, what we mean is light with a very small group velocity compared to c 0.
From Eq. (15.3) one recognizes that in addition to the refractive index itself, contained in the phase velocity \( c={c}_0\slash n\left(\omega \right) \), also the slope Δn(ω)∕Δω enters at which the refractive index n(ω) changes by Δn(ω) when the frequency makes a small change Δω. As can be seen from Fig. 15.9 this slope is typically small far off resonance and the second term in the denominator of Eq. (15.3) is irrelevant. Thus in this frequency range the group velocity is essentially equal to the average phase velocity. One also recognizes that on either side of the resonance, provided one is sufficiently far away from the resonance point, the slope of n(ω) is positive, which is called ‘normal’ dispersion. Here the group velocity is slightly smaller than the phase velocity. In order to see a dramatic difference between group and phase velocity one has to go closer to resonance. We immediately notice the problem with that: Whenever we are closer to resonance, the absorption of the medium becomes large and light gets quickly absorbed. In the following section we will explain how one can overcome this problem in an elegant way making use of an effect called EIT.
But before we proceed with this let’s make a little side remark here: One notices that the situation is completely different in a very narrow frequency range around resonance: Here Δn(ω)∕Δω is negative and large and the group velocity can become larger than the phase velocity. In principle it can even become larger than the vacuum speed of light c 0! But don’t worry, this does not violate Einstein’s principle of relativity as proven already by Arnold Sommerfeld [26]. One notices, for example, that in the same spectral region there is large absorption. As a consequence no signal can actually propagate faster than c 0.
4 Electromagnetically Induced Transparency
How can we get around the problem that strong effects on the group velocity of light seem to be always associated with large losses? The answer came from an effect known as EIT [2, 27, 28]. To understand what EIT is all about let us start with an analogy from mechanics [29]: Consider a mass m which can slide on a surface and is attached to a wall with a spring, as shown in Fig. 15.11a. This system forms an oscillator with frequency \( {\omega}_0=\sqrt{k\slash m} \), where k is the spring constant. Now assume that there is some friction, e.g. due to a rough surface on which the mass slides. If the oscillator is excited by a periodic force with frequency ω close to the resonance frequency ω 0, energy is transferred to the oscillator and subsequently dissipated into heat due to the friction. The dissipated power P(ω) depends on the frequency mismatch between oscillator and drive frequency \( \varDelta =\omega -{\omega}_0 \) and has a similar form as the absorption curve in Fig. 15.9.
Now suppose we couple this oscillator to another mass oscillating with the same frequency ω 0 using an additional spring with spring constant K (Fig. 15.11b). Let us assume next that the second oscillator has little or no friction. If we now drive the first mass with a periodic force something interesting happens: Looking at Fig. 15.11c, where we have plotted the dissipated power again as function of frequency, one notices that if the driving frequency ω matches exactly the oscillator resonance frequency ω 0 little or no energy gets dissipated!
The reason is that the first mass, i.e. the one with friction, does not move at all. Only the second mass, the one with little or no friction, oscillates. It does this in such a way that it produces a force on the first mass exactly opposite to the external force F. The two forces compensate each other, and so the first mass stands still. One can say that the system of oscillators is driven into a dark mode, i.e. a mode without dissipation in which the lossy oscillator is not excited. Consequently the effect of friction is reduced considerably and no or little energy is dissipated.
The situation changes if the second mass also experiences a substantial friction. In particular, if the loss rates of both oscillators are the same, i.e. γ 0 = γ, the loss power spectrum is just the addition of two simple loss curves slightly shifted in frequency relative to each other, as shown in Fig. 15.11d. As long as γ 0 is not too large, there are two maxima corresponding to the two eigenfrequencies of the coupled oscillators. The splitting increases with \( \sqrt{K} \), i.e. with the strength of the coupling. Most importantly if γ 0 vanishes or is very small, one can make the coupling very weak and still the dissipation essentially disappears when driving the first mass. This creates a situation where one can be close to resonance while there is almost no loss.
This principle can be translated to atomic oscillators. What is needed are two oscillators, one of them almost lossless, another one lossy, and the two oscillators need to be coupled by a ‘spring’. This can be realized in a 3-level \( \varLambda \)-type system shown in Fig. 15.12. The atom-light coupling scheme is called \( \varLambda \)-type scheme because of the resemblance to the Greek letter \( \varLambda \).
The first oscillator corresponds to the transition between the initially populated ground state g and the excited state e, as shown in Fig. 15.12a. This oscillator dissipates energy because of decay of the excited state e with rate γ, e.g. due to spontaneous emission. The oscillator is driven by the probe field (see Fig. 15.12a) corresponding to the external driving force in the mechanical picture from above. The ground state g together with another metastable ground state s forms the second oscillator (see Fig. 15.12b). The latter state s can be, e.g., a long-lived hyperfine spin state in the atomic ground state manifold, i.e. a low-energy state like g. Therefore the second oscillator is essentially lossless or has very small losses. Finally the role of the spring coupling the two oscillators is taken over by a coherent control laser field inducing transitions between the excited state e and state s (see Fig. 15.12c). The strength of this coupling is directly proportional to the amplitude of the electric field of the control laser, and the resulting splitting of the absorption peak (shown in Fig. 15.13) is denoted as Ω and is called Rabi frequency.
The absorption as a function of the probe field frequency ω relative to the resonance, expressed by the detuning \( \varDelta =\omega -{\omega}_0 \) is shown in Fig. 15.13a, b as red lines. It consists of two absorption peaks like the spectrum of two coupled mechanical oscillators in Fig. 15.11c. Similar to the mechanical analog, the absorption shown in Fig. 15.13a, b vanishes exactly on resonance for γ 0 = 0, or is insignificant for small γ 0. This is quite remarkable since this means that despite the fact that one is very close to the resonance frequencies of the coupled system, the absorption is vanishingly small! Since a non-absorbing medium is transparent and since this effect is induced by the coupling of the two atomic oscillators by the drive laser, this phenomenon was called electromagnetically induced transparency or in short EIT.
The phenomenon of EIT has a widespread application in atomic and molecular physics and in optics. It can be used, for example, to make nonlinear optical processes much more efficient as it allows to operate close to atomic resonance without suffering from absorption. Some of the interesting applications will be discussed in detail in the following section.
5 Slow Light, Stored Light and Dark-State Polaritons
5.1 Slow Light
As we have discussed in Sect. 15.3 the absorption spectrum is associated with the imaginary part of the susceptibility. Figure 15.13a, b show the absorption spectrum of the atomic medium at an EIT resonance. The spectrum consists of two lines separated by an amount proportional to the strength of the driving field (Ω) and in between these two peaks the absorption goes to zero. Also shown is the real part of the susceptibility as a function of frequency, which is called dispersion. In Fig. 15.13c we have plotted the absorption and dispersion spectra of two uncoupled oscillators with slightly different frequencies. We notice that the dispersion curves look qualitatively very similar in Fig. 15.13a, c. In particular the real part of the susceptibility, i.e. the refractive index, has a positive slope around Δ = 0. In the case of two uncoupled two-level systems this just results from superposing the below-resonance tail corresponding to one oscillator with the above-resonance tail of the other. The most important difference between the case of two uncoupled resonances and EIT is that in the former case the absorption does not vanish in between the two resonances.
The dispersion curve has a remarkable feature right on resonance. It has a linear slope that can become very steep. In fact the closer the two absorption peaks are, the steeper is the dispersion curve. From Eq. (15.3) we notice that a steep slope of the index of refraction leads to a very large denominator in the expression for the group velocity. This means close to resonance the medium is, on the one hand, transparent due to EIT and at the same time the group velocity can be extremely small. This is the origin of ultra-slow light in EIT.
The value of the group velocity in an EIT medium is determined by the general equation (15.3) with the second term in the denominator being much larger than the first one, giving
where Ω is the Rabi frequency of the drive laser, and ρ is the density of atoms. By turning down the intensity of the drive laser, i.e. by reducing Ω, or alternatively by increasing the atom density ρ, one can reach very small values of the group velocity. This can also be seen from Fig. 15.13a, b: Reducing Ω the separation between the absorption maxima decreases making the dispersion curve steeper in the center and hence the group velocity smaller.
The first experiments measuring the group velocity reduction in EIT where done by Harris et al. [3] in an atomic vapor cell reaching \( {v}_{\mathrm{gr}}={c}_0\slash 170 \). The smallest group velocities achieved so far in experiments are obtained using very cold and dense clouds of atoms such as in a Bose Einstein Condensate and are on the order of 10 m/s, i.e. \( {v}_{\mathrm{gr}}={c}_0\slash 30,000,000 \) [4].
When a light pulse enters a medium with a small group velocity it will be transmitted if its central frequency is close enough to the resonance and if its spectral width, i.e. the spread of frequencies associated with any pulse of finite duration, is much less than the distance between the two peaks in the absorption spectrum shown in Fig. 15.13. The very steep slope of the refractive index has also a profound effect on the spatial shape of the pulse, as illustrated in Fig. 15.14. When the pulse just enters the medium its front end will propagate with the group velocity v gr, while its back end still propagates with the vacuum speed of light. As a consequence the pulse will be dramatically compressed in length inside the medium. The compression ratio is given by
This resembles a situation where a number of vehicles moving fast on a highway suddenly approaches the beginning of an area with restricted speed. At this point the bunch of cars is compressed since when the first cars have already entered the area of restricted velocity, the ones at the back still drive at full speed. If the velocity of the vehicles is reduced by half, the distance between them becomes twice smaller, so the compression factor is 1/2. Since in the atomic media the light can be slowed down to such extremely small velocities as \( {v}_{\mathrm{gr}}\approx {c}_0\slash 30,000,000=10 \) m/s, the incoming pulse of fast light with original length l 0 of about 1 km will be compressed to a pulse of length l of about 30 μm (!). In this way even very long pulses of light can be made to fit into a small-sized material, such as an elongated (cigar shape) Bose Einstein Condensate of sodium atoms used in the 1999 experiment by the group of Hau [4]. When the pulse leaves the medium the opposite effect happens. The leading edge travels fast since it is in free space and the back end lags behind as it is still inside the medium. At the end the outgoing pulse has the same length as the incoming one, at least under ideal conditions. This is again like the spatial decompression of a bunch of cars when leaving the area of restricted speed on the highway.
5.2 Stopped Light and Quantum Memories for Photons
As can be seen from Eq. (15.4) the group velocity of slow light can be controlled by the strength of the coupling laser or the density of the medium. So what would happen if we turn the coupling laser off while the probe pulse propagates inside the EIT medium? The medium becomes immediately opaque for the probe light and thus we expect no probe field to survive. This is indeed the case. So does this mean the probe pulse is lost? Surprisingly this does not happen!
At the entrance of the medium most of the incoming photons are transferred to atomic excitations during the slowing down. In this process the pulse is also substantially compressed in space, so that it fits inside the medium. The atomic excitations, carrying information about the incoming pulse, travel together with the remaining photons. If the control field is switched off while the compressed pulse is still inside the medium the light disappears, i.e. no probe light survives. But if the control field is switched on again at a later instant of time, the pulse miraculously reappears! This is shown in the numerical simulation of Fig. 15.15. The right-hand side shows the propagation of the compressed light pulse inside the medium when the control laser is switched off and on again as illustrated on the left-hand side. So obviously we have somehow managed to stop (or more specifically to store) the light pulse for a while and sent it off its way a while later.
This remarkable phenomenon of light stopping (storing) was theoretically predicted in 2000 [12] and experimentally demonstrated in 2001 by two groups at Harvard University [13] and the Roland Institute of Science [14]. Figure 15.16 is a reproduction of the data obtained in one of these experiments from [14]. In these experiments a storage time of up to half a millisecond was reached. In 2009 the group of Immanuel Bloch at the Max Planck Institute for Quantum Optics in Garching, Germany in collaboration with colleagues from Israel has increased the storage time to 240 ms using ultracold atoms in a Mott insulating state in a three-dimensional optical lattice [30]. In the so-called Mott insulating phase atoms are particularly protected from perturbations such as collisions and diffusion, which leads to the prolonged storage duration. The current record for storage times is 1 min [31]. It has been obtained in doped glasses, where impurity atoms behave almost like free atoms in a vapor with the advantage that they do not move as in the Mott insulating state discussed above, and the atomic density is higher than in a gas.
5.3 Slow-Light Polaritons
We have seen in Sect. 15.3 that the microscopic picture of light propagation in a transparent medium is that each atomic oscillator absorbs a tiny little bit of an incoming photon, stores it for a short moment and releases it again with a small time delay as electromagnetic energy. The amount of the time delay is determined by the ratio of group velocity and vacuum speed of light. Furthermore the reduction in the group velocity also leads to a spatial compression of a photon pulse at the entrance to the atomic medium, as discussed in the previous subsection. If a light pulse is spatially compressed without increasing its amplitude, this means that its content of photon energy decreases, i.e. the total number of photons contained in the pulse must be reduced according to the spatial compression. Where do these photons go if the medium is not absorbing? The answer is: They are temporarily stored in the form of atomic spin excitations.
In an usual transparent medium, such as glass, the ratio between the number of atomic excitations and photons is fixed and is very tiny. In an EIT medium this ratio can be large and it can be dynamically modified by tuning the strength of the control laser or by changing the atomic density. The best way to describe this is not to think in terms of photons and atoms separately but in terms of a combined quasiparticle, called polariton, containing a contribution due to both a photon and an atomic spin excitation, i.e. the excitation of the atom from the initially populated atomic ground states g to another ground state s [12, 32, 33]. The polariton picture has been introduced in [12] to describe storing and releasing of slow light following an earlier single-mode treatment [32] used to describe Raman adiabatic passage between the atomic ground states which did not include pulse propagation. We can visualize this polariton as a vector with two components, the electric field \( \mathcal{E} \) and an atomic excitation S indicated in Fig. 15.17, where the mixing angle \( \theta \) determines the ratio between the photonic and atomic components making up the polariton. Since the polariton is only partially a photon and only the photons move, the propagation speed is determined by the fraction of photons comprising the polariton:
The group velocity v gr is evidently less than that of pure photons. (Here α is some constant, which is not relevant for the present discussion.) When the probe pulse is outside the medium, where ρ = 0, it can be interpreted as a polariton with \( { \cos}^2\theta =1 \) representing a pure photon without any atomic component. When it enters the medium, e.g. the cloud of ultracold atoms in the BEC experiment of Hau et al. [4], the density ρ increases smoothly in space. As a consequence the polariton turns smoothly into a mixed atomic-photonic excitation, with a large atomic component.
Since Ω, determining the group velocity in Eq. (15.6), is a tunable parameter, the composition of the slow-light polariton can be modified further while the pulse is propagating inside the medium. In the case of slow light, \( { \cos}^2\theta \) is much less than unity already when the probe pulse has just entered the medium and most of the excitations which were originally photons propagate as an atomic excitation. By further reducing the strength of the control laser Ω from the initial value where \( { \cos}^2\theta \) is finite (yet much smaller than unity) all the way to zero, the slow-light polariton looses its photon component altogether and reduces to a pure atomic excitation which does not move any more. By switching on the control laser again at a later time, \( { \cos}^2\theta \) becomes finite again (yet much smaller than unity). The slow-light pulse resumes its motion inside the medium until reaching the end of the atomic cloud where it finally converts completely into a fast, purely photonic pulse. This explains the reappearance of the light pulse, when the control field is turned back on again. As shown in Fig. 15.18, illustrating the stopping and reacceleration of a slow-light pulse while inside the medium, the light storage and retrieval sequence becomes very clear in terms of the polariton picture. The polariton is there all the time. It only changes its character, first from fast light to slow light, and then to a frozen atomic spin excitation and finally back to a slow polariton and eventually to fast light again.
6 Stationary Light
We have seen in the last section that a light pulse can be brought to a complete stop without loosing the information it contains by storing it in an atomic excitation. When the light pulse is at a halt, no photon is left in the medium anymore, so the polariton becomes entirely an atomic excitation. In the example of cars and trailers this corresponds to the case when all cars are converted into trailers. Thus there is no car left to pull and everything comes to a stop. There is, however, a way to keep the cars from driving without converting all of them to trailers. If two cars driving in opposite directions pull the same trailer, their forces can compensate and neither of the two can move forward. This is exactly what is happening in a situation called stationary light, which we will explain in the following.
A very interesting aspect of stationary light is that it mimics the behaviour of a massive quantum particle described by the Schrödinger equation for the amplitude of the stationary light polariton Ψ ss:
Unlike photons in free space, which always propagate at the speed of light c, massive particles can stand still, or more precisely, as we are talking about quantum particles, can have a zero average velocity. Importantly the effective mass m ∗ of the stationary light polaritons is not a fixed quantity such as the mass of an electron or a proton, but is a tunable parameter. It can be changed by the strength of the control laser fields. This property makes stationary light an interesting model system for analyzing fundamental properties of massive quantum particles.
What is the physics behind stationary light? Suppose there are two (rather than one) control laser beams of equal strength \( {\varOmega}_{+}={\varOmega}_{-}=\varOmega \) and two (rather than one) probe fields \( {\mathcal{E}}_{\pm } \) inducing transitions in a three-level \( \varLambda \)-system or a four-level system, as shown in Fig. 15.19.
The four-level system can be viewed as two \( \varLambda \) sub-systems, one for fields propagating in the forward direction (+), and another sub-system for the fields propagating in the backward direction (−). Since the two control fields have the same amplitude, so do the probe fields. In each of these Lambda systems the respective pairs of control and probe fields induce a transition from the ground atomic state g to the metastable state s (see Fig. 15.19). In such a situation the two counter-propagating probe beams drive the same atomic transition g → s. Since the amplitudes of both probe fields are the same, each photon propagating forward has its counterpart, a photon propagating backward, and a stationary pattern of light is formed, frozen in the medium. This is as if two racing cars driving in opposite directions try to pull the same trailer but are not able to move it since their forces compensate (see Fig. 15.3).
For stationary light it is important that the counter-propagating probe fields are coupled to each other by the atomic medium. To see this let us draw an analogy with the string of a guitar: When a guitar player pulls the string at some place, two waves of equal frequency are created which propagate along the string in opposite directions. If two wavepackets of equal strength and opposite propagation directions are superimposed, a standing wave forms, but only for the short period of time for which they overlap. The two wavepackets would continue to propagate each in its own direction. Soon they would not overlap anymore and would be two spatially separated wavepackets. To prevent this another element is needed: At the points where the string is fixed to the body of the guitar, the wavepackets get reflected and the effect of this is a true standing wave that does not smear out. In a similar manner, one could produce a standing wave of light by confining the radiation in a resonator between parallel mirrors, so that the forward propagating light is permanently reflected to the backward propagating direction and vice versa. This principle is used, e.g., in a laser allowing the light to pass many times the lasing medium.
Stationary light also involves a permanent reflection of one component into the other but with no mirrors, and one can think of a kind of a mirrorless resonator. So what takes over the role of the fixing points of the guitar string or the mirrors reflecting the light? In fact we have here a whole periodic sequence of ‘fixing’ points, which causes reflection. In the case of a simple \( \varLambda \)-scheme, shown in Fig. 15.19a, the control lasers form a stationary intensity pattern that oscillates in space. Thus there is a periodic grating where the total control field intensity vanishes, which also means that in a periodic spatial pattern there are points without EIT for the probe light. This periodic array acts in a similar way as an absorption grating and reflects the forward and backward propagating components of the probe field. In the case of the four-level scheme, shown in Fig. 15.19b, the situation is somewhat different. Here the two control fields are not only propagating in opposite directions, but they also have opposite circular polarizations. Now, superimposing two light waves of equal intensity and with opposite circular polarization results in constant total field intensity with a linear polarization. Yet, since the two control beams propagate opposite to each other, the linear polarization rotates in space, forming a polarization grating. This polarization grating has the same effect as the intensity grating in the case of the simple \( \varLambda \)-scheme, it reflects forward- and backward propagating components into each other making the light stationary.
Stationary light has been first observed in 2003 by the group of Mikhail Lukin at Harvard University [17] using a \( \varLambda \)-type atom-light coupling which involves pairs of counter-propagating control (probe) beams with the same frequency, shown in Fig. 15.19a. One difficulty of these experiments is to make the ‘non-moving light’ visible. A trick used here is that the stationary light tends to excite also further off-resonant transitions to other excited states with a small probability. These excitations are then visible due to the spontaneous emission from these states.
Another form of stationary light, called bichromatic stationary light was observed in 2009 by the group of Ite Yu at the National Tsing Hua University in Taiwan [20] using a double \( \varLambda \) coupling scheme, as shown in Fig. 15.19b. Here the frequency (or color) of the two control fields and, respectively, the two probe fields were different, thus the name ‘bichromatic’. Stationary light pulses maximize the interaction time and thus can provide a considerable interaction efficiency even at a single-photon level. Interaction of two stationary light pulses through the medium was experimentally demonstrated by the same group 3 years later [21].
7 Multi-Component Slow Light
We have seen that slow light can be turned into something that behaves like a massive quantum particle. It is known from quantum physics that certain particles can show up in different forms, i.e. they can have different internal states. Electrons, for example, possess two different spin states, spin-up and spin-down states. In a bit oversimplified picture the spin of a particle can be viewed as a tiny gyroscope resulting from rotation of the particle around its center. Such a rotation is often accompanied with a magnetic dipole, so an electron represents a little magnet pointing up or down depending on the spin state relative to the chosen axis. More exotic particles can have not only spin but also other internal degrees of freedom, such as isospin, colour or flavour. So an interesting question is: Can we give slow light internal properties such that it mimics massive quantum particles with, e.g., spin? The answer is yes, and this makes slow light an even more interesting object for quantum physicists. We note that in quantum mechanics the spin of, e.g., an electron is a relativistic effect, so slow light with spin can be used to investigate relativistic quantum physics.
Slow light as introduced in Sect. 15.5 and the stationary light discussed in Sect. 15.6 both involve only one spin component associated with a transition from the initially populated ground state g to one other ground state s, and described by the amplitude S, as illustrated in Fig. 15.20a, b. This represents a single normal mode of oscillations of the coupled atom-light system (a single polariton) even though there are two counter-propagating probe fields, as in the case of the stationary light depicted in Fig. 15.20b.
In order for stationary light to have two components, the counter-propagating probe fields \( {\mathcal{E}}_{\pm } \) (together with a number of control beams) should drive two different spin coherences described by two amplitudes S ±. This is illustrated in Fig. 15.20c. Two-component stationary light can be implemented using a tripod [23] or a double-tripod [24] atom-light coupling scheme, the latter shown in Fig. 15.21. Here one has two pairs of counter-propagating control fields with Rabi frequencies Ω s± and Ω h± inducing the atomic transitions s → e ± and h → e ±, respectively. Compared to the double \( \varLambda \) scheme used for stationary light (Fig. 15.19b) now there is an extra pair of counter-propagating control laser beams Ω h±, as well as an extra atomic ground state h. This leads to EIT for a pair of counter-propagating probe fields \( {\mathcal{E}}_{\pm } \) inducing transitions (together with the control fields) from the initially populated ground state g to two superpositions of the initially unpopulated atomic ground states s and h. Consequently the fields \( {\mathcal{E}}_{+} \) and \( {\mathcal{E}}_{-} \) drive different spin coherences characterized by the amplitudes S + and S −.
If S + and S − were not coupled to each other, the two probe beams would propagate in opposite directions slowly and independently from each other. The coupling emerges though a two-photon detuning \( \delta ={\delta}_s=-{\delta}_h \) shown in Fig. 15.21. The corresponding two types of polaritons behave like particles with positive and negative effective masses, i.e. like electrons and positrons representing particles and antiparticles in the relativistic Dirac theory. Thus the two-component (spinor) slow-light polaritons Ψ obey an effective one-dimensional Dirac equation
where \( {\sigma}_z \) and \( {\sigma}_y \) are the 2 × 2 Pauli matrices. For zero two-photon detuning δ, the two polaritons propagate in opposite directions with an effective speed c ∗ = v gr given by the slow-light group velocity. A non-vanishing two-photon detuning introduces a coupling between the counter-propagating polaritons, providing a particle–antiparticle type dispersion with a variable mass \( {m}^{\ast }=\hslash \delta \slash {v}_{\mathrm{gr}}^2 \) [24]. An important feature of spinor slow light is that the relevant scales of velocity, energy and length, where relativistic effects start to matter, are very different from the values for say electrons. The effective ‘vacuum speed of light’ c ∗ = v gr can now be a few meters per second instead of 300,000 km/s. The relativistic rest energy \( {m}^{\ast }{c}^{\ast 2}=\hslash \delta \) can be many orders of magnitude smaller than that for an electron, making it possible to observe particle–antiparticle pair generation processes in a conventional laser lab. Finally the relativistic length scale, called Compton length \( {\lambda}_C^{\ast }=\hslash \slash {m}^{\ast }{c}^{\ast } \), is now large enough to be resolved in laboratory experiments as opposed to the value of 10−12 m for an electron. The possibility of a locally adjustable mass allows furthermore to observe a number of other interesting phenomena. For instance, if the mass m ∗ of the Dirac particle suddenly changes at a certain point in space from the value + |m| to − |m| , a localized, topological mid-gap (zero-energy) state is created. If m ∗ is a randomly varying function of space with a vanishing mean-value, there exist mid-gap states with unusual correlations [23, 34, 35].
Two-component slow light has been recently implemented in an experiment [25] using the double-tripod coupling scheme, like the one shown in Fig. 15.21 but with co-propagating rather than counter-propagating control and probe laser fields. Oscillations due to an effective interaction between the two components of the probe field have been observed revealing the two-component nature of the slow light. It was demonstrated that the double-tripod scheme enables precision measurements of frequency detunings. Furthermore a possible application of the double-tripod scheme as quantum memory/rotator for a two-colour qubit was experimentally demonstrated. This offers potential applications in quantum computation and quantum information processing.
8 Quo Vadis Slow Light?
Light is fascinating! Light has very many uses and modern life would be unthinkable without them. Thus there is plenty of reason for us to celebrate the Year of Light. We believe that the applications of slow light based on EIT and its generalizations, which we have discussed in this chapter of the book, are important additions to this list of reasons. We have seen that coupling light to atomic media, which are specially prepared by external laser fields, allows us to dramatically modify the property of photons. We can change their effective propagation velocity, can store them or more precisely their information content with important applications for quantum information networks based on light, and we can turn them into massive quantum particles with tunable mass. Finally we can even use them to model relativistic quantum particles with spin.
It is interesting to note that EIT and slow light are not restricted to light in the optical frequency spectrum coupled to atoms. EIT can also be generated in other type of coupled oscillators, such as meta-materials build up of periodic arrays of small metallic antennas [36]. This allows to access the microwave part of the electromagnetic spectrum. On the other hand, the storage and release of light can also be carried out beyond atomic systems. Recently the conversion of light pulses into mechanical excitations of a silica optomechanical resonator and the subsequent retrieval of radiation using a method closely related to the EIT was experimentally demonstrated [37].
All phenomena we have discussed so far in this chapter address the single-particle properties of slow light, i.e. properties of individual photons. Yet it is also highly desirable to make photons interact with each other sufficiently strongly. Strong and controlled interactions between individual photons would, e.g., allow to implement quantum logic operations in the so-called quantum gates, the second important ingredient next to a quantum memory for photon-based quantum information technology. Interactions are also crucial for most applications of slow light to fundamental science. Several ideas have been put forward here to exploit the properties of slow light for implementing strong interactions. For example, the possibility offered by EIT to operate close to atomic resonances without suffering from absorption can be exploited to enhance nonlinear optical processes in atomic media [21, 38–44]. Another very promising direction is to combine EIT with the so-called Rydberg atoms. Here the atomic state s populated during the propagation and storage of light is not a hyperfine (spin) ground state of an atom, but rather a Rydberg state corresponding to a very high atomic level close to the ionization threshold. Such a state is metastable and has a very long lifetime. Atoms in Rydberg states exhibit very strong and long-range dipole–dipole interactions. This property is carried over to slow-light polaritons, whose spin component contains the Rydberg state, thus making these Rydberg polaritons strongly interacting [45]. The strongly nonlinear and nonlocal interaction between Rydberg polaritons has been observed in a number of recent experiments [46–50]. This opens many more fascinating applications in fundamental science and in quantum technology, and we anticipate a bright future for slow light.
9 Conclusions
In this chapter we have explained what slow light is and what it is good for, how to understand the physics of it and how one can practically make light go so slow. To answer these questions, we used simple pictures, on the one hand, and supplemented them with a little bit of details, on the other hand, for those who want to go slightly deeper into the field. Subsequently we discussed recent generalizations of slow light, such as stationary and spinor slow light which are interesting model system and can be used to understand more complex quantum systems. The chapter also presents important applications of the slow light in photon-based quantum information technology.
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Fleischhauer, M., Juzeliūnas, G. (2016). Slow, Stored and Stationary Light. In: Al-Amri, M., El-Gomati, M., Zubairy, M. (eds) Optics in Our Time. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-31903-2_15
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