Article abstract


Nature Photonics 3, 103 - 106 (2009)
Published online: 25 January 2009 | doi:10.1038/nphoton.2008.290

Subject Categories: Fundamental optical physics | Nonlinear optics

Four-wave-mixing stopped light in hot atomic rubidium vapour

Ryan M. Camacho1,2, Praveen K. Vudyasetu1 & John C. Howell1


Digital signal processing, holography, and quantum and classical information processing rely heavily upon recording the amplitude and phase of coherent optical signals. One method for achieving coherent information storage makes use of electromagnetically induced transparency. Storage is achieved by compressing the optical pulse using the steep dispersion of the electromagnetically induced transparency medium and then mapping the electric field to local atomic quantum-state superpositions. Here we show that nonlinear optical processes may enhance pulse compression and storage, and that information about the nonlinear process itself may be stored coherently. We report on a pulse storage scheme in hot atomic rubidium vapour, in which a four-wave-mixing normal mode is stored using a double-Lambda configuration. The entire (broadened) waveform of the input signal is recovered after several hundred microseconds (1/e time of about 120 micros), as well as a new optical mode (idler) generated from the four-wave-mixing process.

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  1. Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Rochester, Rochester, New York 14627, USA
  2. The Thomas J. Watson, Sr. Laboratories of Applied Physics, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California 91125, USA

Correspondence to: Ryan M. Camacho1,2 e-mail: camacho@caltech.edu




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