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  1. Bi-chromatic intensity squeezing using four-wave mixing in 85 Rb vapor

    We experimentally investigate four-wave mixing (FWM) in a diamond interaction scheme using 85 Rb vapor, and identify the optimal conditions for joint amplification and relative intensity squeezing of two optical fields: one near the 85 Rb D 1 optical transition ( λ  = 794.6 nm) and the other in the telecom O-band ( λ  = 1324 nm). We achieved a reduction of relative intensity noise by up to 2.6 ± 0.4 dB compared with the shot noise level, signifying the non-classical quantum correlations. The observed level of intensity squeezing is primarily limited by the available pump laser power, which constrains the achievable FWM gain. Numerical simulations show good agreement with the experimental results.

  2. Electron beam characterization via quantum coherent optical magnetometry

    We present a quantum optics-based detection method for determining the position and current of an electron beam. As electrons pass through a dilute vapor of rubidium atoms, their magnetic field perturbs the atomic spin's quantum state and causes polarization rotation of a laser resonant with an optical transition of the atoms. By measuring the polarization rotation angle across the laser beam, we recreate a 2D projection of the magnetic field and use it to determine the e-beam position, size, and total current. We tested this method for an e-beam with currents ranging from 30 to 110 μA. Our approach is insensitive to electron kinetic energy, and we confirmed that experimentally between 10 and 20 keV. In conclusion, this technique offers a unique platform for noninvasive characterization of charged particle beams used in accelerators for particle and nuclear physics research.

  3. Four-wave mixing with anti-parity-time symmetry in hot 85Rb vapor

    Here, we report an experimental demonstration of anti-parity-time symmetric optical four-wave mixing in thermal rubidium vapor, where the propagation of probe and stokes fields in a double-Λ scheme is governed by a non-Hermitian Hamiltonian. We are particularly interested in studying quantum intensity correlations between the two fields near the exceptional point, taking into account loss and accompanied Langevin noise. Our experimental measurements of classical four-wave mixing gain and the associated two-mode relative-intensity squeezing are in reasonable agreement with the theoretical predictions.


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