Phys. Rev. A 56, 1007 - 1011 (1997)

Temporal response of an atom to a stochastic field: Resonant enhancement of population fluctuations at the Rabi frequency

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J. C. Camparo, J. G. Coffer, and R. P. Frueholz
Electronics Technology Center, The Aerospace Corporation, Mail Stop: M2-253, P.O. Box 92957, Los Angeles, California 90009

Received 13 March 1997

Recent theoretical investigations have shown that when atoms resonantly interact with strong, phase-fluctuating fields of fairly arbitrary character there is an underlying simplicity in their temporal response to the field. Specifically, theory predicts that the atom’s response can be divided into two distinct temporal components: an adiabatic component manifesting itself in the instantaneous frame of field-atom interactions as a Bloch-vector trajectory figure-eight pattern, and a nonadiabatic component manifesting itself as population variations oscillating at the Rabi frequency. Here, we experimentally verify theoretical expectations regarding the nonadiabatic component of the field’s temporal response. In the presence of a resonant field suffering broadband phase noise we show that atomic population fluctuations display a resonant enhancement at Fourier frequencies corresponding to the Rabi frequency, and that the characteristics of this resonance are similar to those of a damped, driven harmonic oscillator.


©1997 The American Physical Society

URL: http://link.aps.org/abstract/PRA/v56/p1007
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevA.56.1007
PACS: 42.50.Md, 42.50.Ar, 32.80.-t

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