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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20170621T110000
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SUMMARY:JQI Special Seminar
CREATED:20170523T111246Z
DTSTAMP:20170523T111246Z
URL:https://www.google.com/calendar/event?eid=Y3JhbmYwNGZ1M2EwOGYycXY5ampna3IzdmcgbGJrNjYwYTc1YjhqaDdlazZqcjg0amZ1ZTBAZw
DESCRIPTION:Darrick Chang, ICFO, Spain\N\NQuantum optics using two-dimensional atomic arrays\N\NTraditional quantum interfaces between atomic ensembles and light have relied upon disordered three-dimensional atomic gases. Recently, however, capabilities have emerged to form lower-dimensional, ordered arrays of trapped atoms. This raises the interesting question of whether such systems can give rise to qualitatively different quantum optical phenomena and functionality, as compared to traditional interfaces. Here, we discuss ongoing work to explore this question in two-dimensional arrays. We show how a single 2D layer can form a nearly perfect mirror for near-resonant light or constitute an efficient quantum memory. We also discuss how atomic Rydberg interactions can be used to endow the system with strong optical nonlinearities at the single-photon level, whose dynamics exhibit rich spatio-temporal behavior as compared to typical quasi-1D field propagation through atomic ensembles.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:Darrick Chang, ICFO, Spain
Quantum optics using two-dimensional atomic arrays
Traditional quantum interfaces between atomic ensembles and light have relied upon disordered three-dimensional atomic gases. Recently, however, capabilities have emerged to form lower-dimensional, ordered arrays of trapped atoms. This raises the interesting question of whether such systems can give rise to qualitatively different quantum optical phenomena and functionality, as compared to traditional interfaces. Here, we discuss ongoing work to explore this question in two-dimensional arrays. We show how a single 2D layer can form a nearly perfect mirror for near-resonant light or constitute an efficient quantum memory. We also discuss how atomic Rydberg interactions can be used to endow the system with strong optical nonlinearities at the single-photon level, whose dynamics exhibit rich spatio-temporal behavior as compared to typical quasi-1D field propagation through atomic ensembles.
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