English

Orientation-to-alignment conversion and spin squeezing

Atomic Physics 2015-03-19 v3 Quantum Physics

Abstract

The relationship between orientation-to-alignment conversion (a form of atomic polarization evolution induced by an electric field) and the phenomenon of spin squeezing is demonstrated. A "stretched" state of an atom or molecule with maximum angular-momentum projection along the quantization axis possesses orientation and is a quantum-mechanical minimum-uncertainty state, where the product of the equal uncertainties of the angular-momentum projections on two orthogonal directions transverse to the quantization axis is the minimum allowed by the uncertainty relation. Application of an electric field for a short time induces orientation-to-alignment conversion and produces a spin-squeezed state, in which the quantum state essentially remains a minimum-uncertainty state, but the uncertainties of the angular-momentum projections on the orthogonal directions are unequal. This property can be visualized using the angular-momentum probability surfaces, where the radius of the surface is given by the probability of measuring the maximum angular-momentum projection in that direction. Brief remarks are also given concerning collective-spin squeezing and quantum nondemolition measurements.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1106.3538,
  title  = {Orientation-to-alignment conversion and spin squeezing},
  author = {S. M. Rochester and M. P. Ledbetter and T. Zigdon and A. D. Wilson-Gordon and D. Budker},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1106.3538},
  year   = {2015}
}

Comments

7 pages, 6 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-21T18:24:06.661Z