APS March Meeting 2012
Volume 57, Number 1
Monday–Friday, February 27–March 2 2012;
Boston, Massachusetts
Session H10: Invited Session: Strongly Interacting Photons
8:00 AM–11:00 AM,
Tuesday, February 28, 2012
Room: 210A
Sponsoring
Unit:
DAMOP
Chair: Mikhail Lukin, Harvard University
Abstract ID: BAPS.2012.MAR.H10.4
Abstract: H10.00004 : Slow-light polaritons in Rydberg gases
9:48 AM–10:24 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Michael Fleischhauer
(Dept. of Physics, University of Kaiserslautern)
Slow-light polaritons are quasi-particles generated
in the interaction of photons with laser-driven atoms
with a $\Lambda$- or ladder-type coupling scheme
under conditions of electromagnetically induced
transparency (EIT). They are a superposition of
electromagnetic and collective spin excitations. If
one of the states making up the atomic spin is a
high lying Rydberg level, the polaritons are subject to
a strong and non-local interaction mediated by a
dipole-dipole or van-der Waals coupling between excited Rydberg atoms.
I will present and discuss an effective many-body model
for these Rydberg polaritons. Depending on the detuning of
the control laser the interaction potential between the polaritons
can be repulsive or attractive and can have a large imaginary
component for distances less than the so-called blockade radius.
The non-local effective interaction gives rize to interesting many-body
phenomena such as the generation of photons with an avoided volume,
visible in stronlgy suppressed two-particle correlations inside the blockade
volume. Moreover the long-range, power-law scaling of the interaction
can in the repulsive case give rize to the formation of quasi-crystalline
structures of photons. In a one dimensional system the low-energy
dynamics of the polaritons can be described in terms of a Luttinger
liquid. Using DMRG simulations the Luttinger K parameter is
calculated and conditions for the formation of a quasi-crystal are derived.
When confined to a two-dimensional geometry, e.g. using a resonator
with quasi-degenerate transversal mode spectrum, Rydberg polaritons
are an interesting candidate to study the bosonic fractional quantum
Hall effect. I will argue that the formation of photons with an avoided
volume is essential for explaining recent experiments on stationary
EIT in Rydberg gases [1,2].\\[4pt]
[1] J.D. Pritchard et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 105, 193603 (2010).
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[2] D. Petrosyan, J. Otterbach, and M. Fleischhauer, arXiv:1106.1360
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2012.MAR.H10.4