American Physical Society
APS SitesAPSJournalsPhysicsCentralPhysicsFocus
 
Become a Member | Contact Us
  • Publications
    • Journals of the American Physical Society
    • APS News
    • Physics
    • Physics Today
    • Physical Review Focus
    • Capitol Hill Quarterly
    • Other APS Publications
    • Reciprocal Society Newsletters
  • Meetings & Events
    • March Meeting
    • April Meeting
    • Meeting Calendar
    • Abstract Submission
    • Archives of the Bulletin of the American Physical Society
    • Policies & Guidelines
    • Archived Multimedia Presentations
  • Programs
    • Education
    • International Affairs
    • Physics for All
    • Women in Physics
    • Minorities in Physics
    • Prizes, Awards & Fellowships
  • Membership
    • Join APS
    • Renew Membership
    • Member Directory
    • My Member Profile
    • Member Services
    • APS Units
  • Policy & Advocacy
    • Issues
    • Reports & Studies
    • APS Statements
    • Advocacy Tools
    • Advocacy Resources
    • Fellowships & Fellows
    • Contact APS Public Affairs
  • Careers In Physics
    • Physics Job Opportunities
    • Physics Students
    • Tools for Educators
    • Career Guidance
  • About APS
    • Mission Statement
    • Society Governance
    • Society History
    • Support APS
    • APS Jobs
    • Contact Us
    • Visit Us
About APS
  • Mission Statement
  • Society Governance
  • Society History
  • Support APS
  • APS Jobs
  • Contact Us
  • Visit Us

 
Home   |   About APS   |   Images in Physics   |   Non-Linear Vacuum Rabi Splitting

Non-Linear Vacuum Rabi Splitting

Email | Print

The mutual coupling between atoms and the electromagnetic field is typically very weak on the level of single atoms and photons. When confining the photons to a cavity, the strength of their interaction with an atom can be increased many orders of magnitude.

This strong-coupling regime of cavity quantum electrodynamics has been reached for real atoms in optical cavities, and for artificial atoms in circuit QED and quantum-dot systems. A strong-coupling signature is the splitting of the cavity transmission peak into a pair of resolvable peaks when a single resonant atom is placed inside the cavity – an effect known as vacuum Rabi splitting.

The image below shows that the avoided atom-photon crossing "fans out" when probing the transmission beyond linear response. This effect has recently been observed in a circuit QED experiment at Yale, using a transmon qubit as the artificial atom.

Credit to Circuit QED Team, Yale University. Collaborating scientists include L.S. Bishop , J.M. Chow, Jens Koch, A.A. Houck, M.H. Devoret , E. Thuneberg, S.M. Girvin, and R.J. Schoelkopf.  This work is sponsored by Academy of Finland, NSA, and NSF.

This image was presented with the abstract "Nonlinear response of the vacuum Rabi resonance" at the APS 2009 March Meeting, author Jens Koch.

Gray arrow  March Meeting Image Gallery


Non-Linear Vacuum Rabi Splitting
Image credit:  Circuit QED Team, Yale University

Gray arrow  Current Physics Images

Home | APS Jobs | Media Center | Privacy | Site Map
    © 2009 American Physical Society