6533b82efe1ef96bd12932d7

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Light of Two Atoms in Free Space: Bunching or Antibunching?

Ferdinand Schmidt-kalerSebastian WolfStefan RichterJoachim Von Zanthier

subject

PhysicsPhotonAutocorrelationDetectorGeneral Physics and Astronomy01 natural sciencesFluorescenceIonPosition (vector)0103 physical sciencesThermalAtomic physics010306 general physicsExcitation

description

Photon statistics divides light sources into three different categories, characterized by bunched, antibunched, or uncorrelated photon arrival times. Single atoms, ions, molecules, or solid state emitters display antibunching of photons, while classical thermal sources exhibit photon bunching. Here we demonstrate a light source in free space, where the photon statistics depends on the direction of observation, undergoing a continuous crossover between photon bunching and antibunching. We employ two trapped ions, observe their fluorescence under continuous laser light excitation, and record spatially resolved the autocorrelation function ${g}^{(2)}(\ensuremath{\tau})$ with a movable Hanbury Brown and Twiss detector. Varying the detector position we find a minimum value for antibunching, ${g}^{(2)}(0)=0.60(5)$ and a maximum of ${g}^{(2)}(0)=1.46(8)$ for bunching, demonstrating that this source radiates fundamentally different types of light alike. The observed variation of the autocorrelation function is understood in the Dicke model from which the observed maximum and minimum values can be modeled, taking independently measured experimental parameters into account.

10.1103/physrevlett.124.063603https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32109104