6533b7d1fe1ef96bd125c1a3

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Optomechanical Rydberg-atom excitation via dynamic Casimir-Polder coupling

Giovanni CarugnoMauro AntezzaCaterina BraggioAntonio NotoLucia RizzutoGiuseppe RuosoSalvatore SpagnoloRoberto Passante

subject

CouplingPhysicsCondensed Matter::Quantum GasesQuantum PhysicsRydberg Atoms[PHYS.COND.GAS]Physics [physics]/Condensed Matter [cond-mat]/Quantum Gases [cond-mat.quant-gas]Dynamical Casimir and Casimir-Polder effectGeneral Physics and AstronomyFOS: Physical sciences7. Clean energyQuantum OptomechanicCasimir effectDipolesymbols.namesakeUltracold atomRydberg atomPrincipal quantum numberRydberg formulasymbolsPhysics::Atomic PhysicsAtomic physics[PHYS.COND.CM-SM]Physics [physics]/Condensed Matter [cond-mat]/Statistical Mechanics [cond-mat.stat-mech]Quantum Physics (quant-ph)Excitation

description

We study the optomechanical coupling of a oscillating effective mirror with a Rydberg atomic gas, mediated by the dynamical atom-mirror Casimir-Polder force. This coupling may produce a near-field resonant atomic excitation whose probability scales as $\propto (d^2\;a\;n^4\;t)^2/z_0^8$, where $z_0$ is the average atom-surface distance, $d$ the atomic dipole moment, $a$ the mirror's effective oscillation amplitude, $n$ the initial principal quantum number, and $t$ the time. We propose an experimental configuration to realize this system with a cold atom gas trapped at a distance $\sim 2\cdot10 \, \mu$m from a semiconductor substrate, whose dielectric constant is periodically driven by an external laser pulse, hence realizing en effective mechanical mirror motion due to the periodic change of the substrate from transparent to reflecting. For a parabolic gas shape, this effect is predicted to excite about $\sim 10^2$ atoms of a dilute gas of $10^3$ trapped Rydberg atoms with $n=75$ after about $0.5 \,\mu \mbox{s}$, hence high enough to be detected in typical Rydberg gas experimental conditions.

https://dx.doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.1406.1132