Effects of injected atomic coherence on single-mode frequency locking in a cavity
- Optical Sciences Center, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ (USA)
The coupling of an electric field to an atomic beam prepared in a phase-locked coherent superposition of energy eigenstates is examined for a ring-laser cavity. The active medium is assumed to be a collection of noninteracting homogeneously broadened two-level atoms whose transition is electric-dipole allowed. The atom-field interaction is treated semiclassically and the atomic coherence injected into the cavity is assumed to be phase matched to the unidirectional plane-wave cavity mode. The polarization is derived for the case in which the electric-field-mode envelope has at most linear phase variations in time and is applied to the problem of frequency locking in a cavity. The presence of the atomic coherence causes the active medium to possess an inherent polarization, i.e., a field-independent contribution. This enables an optical cavity to support laser oscillation over the entire range of relative excitations, in particular, even for strongly absorbing media. A simple linear stability analysis is performed on the electric-field envelope by describing the medium with a slowly varying polarization valid when the time scales of the atomic response are much smaller than those of the variations in the envelope. The stability of frequency-locked oscillation depends on the detuning of the cavity from line center and the strength of the injected coherence relative to that of the injected population difference.
- OSTI ID:
- 6632037
- Journal Information:
- Physical Review, A (General Physics); (USA), Vol. 42:3; ISSN 0556-2791
- Country of Publication:
- United States
- Language:
- English
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