English

30-Fold Increase in Atom-Cavity Coupling Using a Parabolic Ring Cavity

Atomic Physics 2018-09-24 v1 Quantum Physics

Abstract

Optical cavities are one of the best ways to increase atom-light coupling and will be a key ingredient for future quantum technologies that rely on light-matter interfaces. We demonstrate that traveling-wave "ring" cavities can achieve a greatly reduced mode waist ww, leading to larger atom-cavity coupling strength, relative to conventional standing-wave cavities for given mirror separation and stability. Additionally, ring cavities can achieve arbitrary transverse-mode spacing simultaneously with the large mode-waist reductions. Following these principles, we build a parabolic atom-ring cavity system that achieves strong collective coupling NC=15(1)NC = 15(1) between N=103N=10^3 Rb atoms and a ring cavity with a single-atom cooperativity CC that is a factor of 35(5)35(5) times greater than what could be achieved with a near-confocal standing-wave cavity with the same mirror separation and finesse. By using parabolic mirrors, we eliminate astigmatism--which can otherwise preclude stable operation--and increase optical access to the atoms. Cavities based on these principles, with enhanced coupling and large mirror separation, will be particularly useful for achieving strong coupling with ions, Rydberg atoms, or other strongly interacting particles, which often have undesirable interactions with nearby surfaces.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1802.05707,
  title  = {30-Fold Increase in Atom-Cavity Coupling Using a Parabolic Ring Cavity},
  author = {Kevin C. Cox and David H. Meyer and Nathan A. Schine and Fredrik K. Fatemi and Paul D. Kunz},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1802.05707},
  year   = {2018}
}

Comments

11 pages, 3 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-23T00:23:54.063Z