A chip-scale atomic beam source for non-classical light via low volume atomic cavity-QED

POSTER

Abstract

Room temperature thermal atoms have proven to be a powerful resource for magnetometry, electrometry, atom-entanglement generation, and robust atomic clocks. Recent efforts have sought to realize compact and highly manufacturable atomic vapors and atomic beams for chip-scale magnetometry and atomic clocks. Here, we show that a chip-scale rubidium beam source can be integrated with a high finesse cavity-QED system. We find that the source does not degrade the cavity and that we can realize strong collective light-atom coupling, few-photon optical non-linearity, and the generation of non-classical light. By demonstrating the compatibility of these two technologies, we open a new path for distributed sources of non-classical light and set the stage for using cavity-QED to enhance the performance of chip-scale magnetometers and atomic clocks.

*This material is based upon work supported by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (Science of Atomic Vapors for New Technologies).

Presenters

  • Braden J Larsen

    • University of Colorado Boulder, JILA

Authors

  • Braden J Larsen

    • University of Colorado Boulder, JILA
  • Hagan Hensley

    • University of Colorado Boulder, JILA
  • Gabriela D Martinez

    • University of Colorado Boulder, National Institute of Standards and Technology Boulder
  • Alexander Staron

    • University of Colorado, Boulder
  • William McGehee

    • National Institute of Standards and Technology Boulder
  • John Kitching

    • National Institute of Standards and Technology Boulder
  • James K Thompson

    • JILA, NIST and Dept. of Physics, Univ. of Colorado, Boulder
    • JILA & Univ. of Colorado
    • JILA, CU Boulder