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Noritsugu Shiokawa

Bio: Noritsugu Shiokawa is an academic researcher from University of Tokyo. The author has contributed to research in topics: Raman cooling & Optical physics. The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 5 publications receiving 789 citations.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a Laguerre-Gaussian (doughnut) beam whose frequency is blue detuned to the atomic transition was used to trap neutral atoms in the dark core of the doughnut beam with the help of two additional laser beams.
Abstract: We have constructed a novel optical trap for neutral atoms by using a Laguerre-Gaussian (doughnut) beam whose frequency is blue detuned to the atomic transition. Laser-cooled rubidium atoms are trapped in the dark core of the doughnut beam with the help of two additional laser beams which limit the atomic motion along the optical axis. About ${10}^{8}$ atoms are initially loaded into the trap, and the lifetime is 150 ms. Because the atoms are confined at a point in a weak radiation field in the absence of any external field, ideal circumstances are provided for precision measurements. The trap opens the way to a simple technique for atom manipulation, including Bose-Einstein condensation of gaseous atoms.

781 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Propagation of a light pulse through a high-Q optical microcavity containing a few cold atoms (N<10) in its cavity mode is investigated experimentally and up to 170 ns propagation lead time ("superluminal"), and 440 ns propagation delay time (subluminals) are observed.
Abstract: Propagation of a light pulse through a high-Q optical microcavity containing a few cold atoms (N<10) in its cavity mode is investigated experimentally. With less than ten cold rubidium atoms launched into an optical microcavity, up to 170 ns propagation lead time ("superluminal"), and 440 ns propagation delay time (subluminal) are observed. Comparison of the experimental data with numerical simulations as well as future experiments are discussed.

47 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a blue-detuned Laguerre-Gaussian (doughnut) laser beam was used to trap cold rubidium atoms by optical dipole force, and polarization gradient cooling was applied to the trapped atoms to suppress the trap loss due to heating caused by random photon scattering of the trapping light.
Abstract: We utilized a blue-detuned Laguerre-Gaussian (doughnut) laser beam to trap cold rubidium atoms by optical dipole force. \Pulsed" polarization gradient cooling was applied to the trapped atoms to suppress the trap loss due to heating caused by random photon scattering of the trapping light. In this trap about 10 8 atoms were initially captured and the trap lifetime was 1.5 s, which was consistent with losses due to background gas collisions. This trap can readily be applied to atom guiding, compression, and evaporative cooling. PACS. 32.80.Pj Optical cooling of atoms; trapping { 39.90.+d Other instrumentation and techniques for atomic and molecular physics

12 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated spectroscopic properties of cold 85 Rb atoms in a magneto-optic trap and recorded both the transmission and reflection spectra of the trapped atoms.
Proceedings ArticleDOI
10 Sep 2000
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used a cell magneto optical trap (MOT) to trap a single atom with a single photon in a high-finesse optical micro cavity, which can be observed in situ and in real time by detecting intensity change on the transmission of a blue-shifted laser beam.
Abstract: Summary form only given. The strong atom-photon coupling generated inside high-finesse optical micro cavity lets us detect a single atom trajectory in real time. Such a strong coupling is a candidate for trapping a single atom with a single photon. Dynamics of trapped atoms can be observed in situ and in real time by detecting intensity change on the transmission of a blue-shifted laser beam. We cooled down and trapped rubidium atoms by using conventional cell magneto optical trap (MOT) and launched them into the micro optical cavity which locates 35 mm above the MOT. By using this signal as trigger and changing the laser frequency, it is, in principle, possible to trap the atom in the cavity.

Cited by
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Proceedings Article
01 Jan 2005
TL;DR: In quantum optical devices, microcavities can coax atoms or quantum dots to emit spontaneous photons in a desired direction or can provide an environment where dissipative mechanisms such as spontaneous emission are overcome so that quantum entanglement of radiation and matter is possible.
Abstract: Microcavity physics and design will be reviewed. Following an overview of applications in quantum optics, communications and biosensing, recent advances in ultra-high-Q research will be presented.

2,857 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, it was shown that if every polarization vector rotates, the light has spin; if the phase structure rotates and if a light has orbital angular momentum (OAM), the light can be many times greater than the spin.
Abstract: As they travel through space, some light beams rotate. Such light beams have angular momentum. There are two particularly important ways in which a light beam can rotate: if every polarization vector rotates, the light has spin; if the phase structure rotates, the light has orbital angular momentum (OAM), which can be many times greater than the spin. Only in the past 20 years has it been realized that beams carrying OAM, which have an optical vortex along the axis, can be easily made in the laboratory. These light beams are able to spin microscopic objects, give rise to rotational frequency shifts, create new forms of imaging systems, and behave within nonlinear material to give new insights into quantum optics.

2,508 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Rydberg atoms with principal quantum number $n⪢1$ have exaggerated atomic properties including dipole-dipole interactions that scale as ${n}^{4}$ and radiative lifetimes that scale at least{n}−3}$ as mentioned in this paper, and it was proposed a decade ago to implement quantum gates between neutral atom qubits.
Abstract: Rydberg atoms with principal quantum number $n⪢1$ have exaggerated atomic properties including dipole-dipole interactions that scale as ${n}^{4}$ and radiative lifetimes that scale as ${n}^{3}$. It was proposed a decade ago to take advantage of these properties to implement quantum gates between neutral atom qubits. The availability of a strong long-range interaction that can be coherently turned on and off is an enabling resource for a wide range of quantum information tasks stretching far beyond the original gate proposal. Rydberg enabled capabilities include long-range two-qubit gates, collective encoding of multiqubit registers, implementation of robust light-atom quantum interfaces, and the potential for simulating quantum many-body physics. The advances of the last decade are reviewed, covering both theoretical and experimental aspects of Rydberg-mediated quantum information processing.

2,156 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
11 Nov 2004-Nature
TL;DR: The observation of strong coupling of a single two-level solid-state system with a photon, as realized by a single quantum dot in a semiconductor microcavity, may provide a basis for future applications in quantum information processing or schemes for coherent control.
Abstract: Cavity quantum electrodynamics, a central research field in optics and solid-state physics, addresses properties of atom-like emitters in cavities and can be divided into a weak and a strong coupling regime. For weak coupling, the spontaneous emission can be enhanced or reduced compared with its vacuum level by tuning discrete cavity modes in and out of resonance with the emitter. However, the most striking change of emission properties occurs when the conditions for strong coupling are fulfilled. In this case there is a change from the usual irreversible spontaneous emission to a reversible exchange of energy between the emitter and the cavity mode. This coherent coupling may provide a basis for future applications in quantum information processing or schemes for coherent control. Until now, strong coupling of individual two-level systems has been observed only for atoms in large cavities. Here we report the observation of strong coupling of a single two-level solid-state system with a photon, as realized by a single quantum dot in a semiconductor microcavity. The strong coupling is manifest in photoluminescence data that display anti-crossings between the quantum dot exciton and cavity-mode dispersion relations, characterized by a vacuum Rabi splitting of about 140 microeV.

1,809 citations

Book ChapterDOI
TL;DR: In this article, optical dipole traps for neutral atoms have been used for storage and trapping of charged and neutral atoms in the vast energy range from elementary particles to ultracold atomic quantum matter.
Abstract: Publisher Summary This chapter discusses optical dipole traps for neutral atoms Methods for storage and trapping of charged and neutral particles have very often served as the experimental key to great scientific advances, covering physics in the vast energy range from elementary particles to ultracold atomic quantum matter It describes the basic physics of dipole trapping in fardetuned light, the typical experimental techniques and procedures, and the different trap types currently available, along with their specific features In the experiments discussed, optical dipole traps have already shown great promise for a variety of different applications Of particular importance is the trapping of atoms in the absolute internal ground state, which cannot be trapped magnetically In this state, inelastic binary collisions are completely suppressed for energetic reasons In this respect, an ultracold cesium gas represents a particularly interesting situation, because Bose–Einstein condensation seems attainable only for the absolute ground state Therefore, an optical trap may be the only way to realize a quantum-degenerate gas of Cs atoms Further, optical dipole traps can be seen as storage devices at the low end of the presently explorable energy scale Future experiments exploiting the particular advantages of these traps can reveal interesting new phenomena

1,231 citations