A three-level laser with an open cavity and a two-mode vacuum reservoir is explored for its quantum properties. Our investigation begins with a normalized order of the noise operators associated with the vacuum reservoir. The master equation and linear operators' equations of motion are used to determine the equations of evolution of the atomic operators' expectation values. The equation of motion answers are then used to calculate the mean photon number, photon number variance, and quadrature variance for single–mode cavity light and two–mode cavity light. As a result, for γ=0, the quadrature variance of light mode a is greater than the mean photon number for two-mode cavity light. As a result, for the two-mode cavity light, the maximum quadrature squeezing is 43.42 percent.
Quantum Properties of Coherently Driven Three-Level Atom Coupled to Vacuum Reservoir
April 22, 2022
September 14, 2022
October 22, 2022
October 24, 2022
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, provided the original work is properly cited.
Abstract
1. Introduction
A quantum optical system in which light is created by three-level atoms inside a cavity coupled to a vacuum reservoir is known as a three-level laser. A source of coherent or chaotic light emitted by an atom inside a cavity coupled to a vacuum reservoir is known as a three-level atom [1]. A three-level atom's top, intermediate, and bottom levels are designated by respectively. Due to stimulated or spontaneous emission, a three-level atom in the top level may decay to level and eventually to level.
The purpose of this paper is to investigate the squeezing and statistical properties of light produced by a coherently driven three-level atom in an open cavity connected to a two-mode vacuum reservoir through a single-port mirror. We also determined equations of evolution of the atomic operators' expectation values using the master equation and large-time approximation. The mean photon number, photon number variance, and quadrature variances of single-mode cavity light beams were calculated using the derived solutions. We calculated the mean photon number, photon number variance, and quadrature squeezing of the two-mode cavity light using the same approaches. We perform our calculations by conventionally grouping the noise operators connected with the vacuum reservoir [1, 2].
2. Dynamics of Linear Operators
As shown in the Figure 1, the atoms' top, intermediate, and bottom levels are indicated by respectively. When an atom transitions from level a to level b and from level b to level c, two photons with the same or different frequencies are emitted, with direct transitions between levels a and c being completely prohibited. When an atom transitions from the top to the intermediate level, light mode a is emitted, whereas light mode b is emitted when the atom transitions from the intermediate to the bottom level [3, 4].
The Hamiltonian describes how coherent light couples the top and bottom levels of a three-level atom [5, 6],
where
is a lowering operator and
Here, is the coupling constant between the driving coherent light and a three-level atom, and is the amplitude of the driving coherent light, which is considered to be real and constant. The interaction of light modes a and b with the atom at resonance is represented by the Hamiltonian [2, 7, 8]
where
and
are lowering atomic operators, g is the coupling constant between the atom and cavity mode a or b, and and are the annihilation operators for light modes a and b. Thus, the total Hamiltonian is given by
The master equation for a three-level atom interacting with a two-mode vacuum reservoir has the form [5]
where is the spontaneous emission decay constant. Hence with the aid of equation (2) the master equation can be put in the form
When the noise operators associated with the vacuum reservoir are set in normal order and the noise forces have no effect on the dynamics of the cavity mode operators, the equations of motion for the operators a and b assume the form [1, 8, 9]
and
Here, is the cavity damping constant and considered to be the same for cavity modes a and b. Then in view of equation (7), equations of motion for the operators and turn out to be
and
Upon adding equations (12) and (13), we get
where,
is the annihilation operator for the superposition of light modes a and b. By employing the relation [8, 10]
we btain
With the same procedure one can obtain the following
where
Equations (17)-(22) are nonlinear differential equations. Now, by applying the large-time approximation [11], the solutions of equations (12) and (13) becomes
and
At steady state, these would obviously be exact relationships. When equations. (26), (27), and their adjoints are introduced, one gets
Considering equations (2), (5), (6) and their adjoints, one obtains
Substitution of equations (29)-(31) into (28) gives
Similarly, the equations of evolution of the atomic operators' expectation values take the form
With
is the stimulated emission decay constant. The completeness relation has the form [12]
Then, we see that [quant-ph, 2012.">13, 14]
where is the probability to find the atom in the top level, is the probability to find the atom in intermediate level, and is the probability to find the atom in the bottom level. The steady state solutions of equations (32)-(37) are found to be
Furthermore, with the aid of equation. (40), one readily obtains
In view of equations (45), equation (46) has the form
Now, on account of equation (47), equation (43) can be expressed as
With the aid of equation (48), one can observe that
Also, from equations (41), (42), and (43), one can readily obtains
By substituting equation (48) into (51) yields
Moreover, on account of equation (45), one can obtain
Now, by Substituting (52) in (47), we have
Finally, on account of equation (52), equation (48) takes the form
3. Photon Statistics
The mean photon number for the cavity light modes a and b is given by [15]
On account of equations (26) and (52), equation (56) can be written as
For non-spontaneous case (), the mean photon number of light mode a has the form
In addition, for equation (58) becomes
The mean photon number of light mode b is determined using the same procedure as
For non-spontaneous case, equation (60) takes the form
In addition, for , equation (61) reduces to
The mean photon number for light modes a and b is the same in both spontaneous and non-spontaneous scenarios, as shown above. The mean photon number for two-mode cavity light can then be expressed as follows
The mean photon number has the form when using the steady state solution of equation (14) and its adjoint
Substituting equations (57) and (58) in (64) for the steady state solution of (14) yields
Now, the mean photon number in the non-spontaneous scenario is in the form
For, equation (66) reduces to
Furthermore, the variance of the photon number is expressible as [3, 5]
On account of equation (56), the variance of the photon number for light mode a is described as
Upon use of equations (26) and (50), one obtains
Moreover,
In view of equation (5), one readily obtains
Equations (69), and (71) are used to calculate the variance of the photon number for light mode a as
On account of equations (52), (53), and (56), equation (73) becomes
Furthermore, for non-spontaneous case, the photon number variance has the form
For,
With the same procedure one can obtain the variance of the photon number for light mode b as
For non-spontaneous case, equation (75) takes the form
For, equation (75) reduces to
which represents the normally-ordered variance of the photon number for the chaotic light. Furthermore, equation (79) indicates that and and hence the photon statistics of each light-mode is super-poissonian.
With the same approach one can readily obtain the variance of the photon number for superposed light modes a and b as
For non-spontaneous case, equation (80) has the form
Additionally, equation (81) reduces to
which represents the normally-ordered variance of the photon number for chaotic light. Furthermore, inspection of equation (82) indicates that and hence the photon statistics of the two-mode light is super-poissionian.
4. Quadrature Squeezing and The mean Photon number
The squeezing properties of light mode a are described by the two quadrature operators [16, 17, 18]
and
In view of equations (83) and (84), the commutation relation becomes
The uncertainty relation for the two Hermitian operators and satisfies the commutation relation , which is described as [5]
Upon use of equation (86), one can readily obtains
On account of equation (57) along with (75), one obtains
Next the variance of the plus and minus quadrature operators becomes [17]
and
In consideration of equation (84), equation (87) can be expressed in terms of the raising and lowering operators as
In view of equations (70) and (72), equation (91) reduces to
Now, by using equations (56) and (64), one obtains
On substituting equations (52) and (53), the quadrature variance for the light mode a becomes
For non-spontaneous case the quadrature variance has the form
In addition, for equation (94) reduces to
In view of equation (63), the quadrature variance of light mode a can be written in terms of the mean photon number as
which is the normally-ordered quadrature variance for chaotic light. In the absence and presence of spontaneous emission the mean photon number of the two-mode light is the same as with the quadrature variance of light mode a. This can be written as
In the same procedure the quadrature variance of light mode b can be obtained as
For equation (99) reduces to
And for Hence, equation (100) merely becomes
Thus, the quadrature variance of light mode b is written in terms of the mean photon number as
which is the normally-ordered quadrature variance for chaotic light. The squeezing properties of the two-mode cavity light can be described as
and
where,
With the aid of equations (103) and (104), the commutation relation is found to be
The quadrature operators’ uncertainty relation for two-mode cavity light is expressed as [10, 11]
Now, in view of equation (106), one can re-write equation (107) as
By employing equations (53) and (54), equation (108) can be written as
In the absence of spontaneous emission it becomes
In the absence of deriving coherent light
which is the uncertainty relation for vacuum state. The variance of the plus and minus quadrature operators of the two-mode cavity light are defined as [19]
and
On account of equations (105), (112) and (113), the plus and minus quadrature variance for the creation and annihilation operators can be written as
Now, using the steady state solution of equation (14) along with (50), one can get
In view of equation (115), the quadrature variance becomes
Thus, with the aid of equation (68) along with (111), equation (116) becomes
By substituting equations (64)-(57) in (117), one obtains
In the absence of spontaneous emission, equation (118) turns to
Besides, for equation (119) will have the form
In view of equation (71), equation (120) can be expressed as
where this represents the normally-ordered quadrature variance for chaotic light. For equations (69), (110), and (119) become
The mean photon number and quadrature variance of a two-mode vacuum condition are represented by equations (122), (123), and (124).
The quadrature squeezing of two-mode cavity light in relation to the quadrature variance of the two-mode cavity vacuum state can be determined using the formula [20]
Equations (109) and (120) are used to obtain
For the above expression reduces to
5. Physical Analysis
- Plots mean photon number (As shown in the Figure 2 below)
- Plots of the variance of the photon number for light mode a (As shown in the Figure 3 below)
- Plots of the variance of the photon number for light mode b (As shown in the Figure 4 below)
- Plots of quadrature variance of two modes light (As shown in the Figure 5 below)
- Plots of quadrature squeezing (As shown in the Figure 6 below)
According to Figs. 1 and 2, light mode a's mean photon number and photon number variance are higher than those for. The plots, however, overlap at that moment in Figure 3. This demonstrates that when the variation of the light's photon number is greater for mode b than for, and vice versa.
The plot from Fig.4 clearly demonstrates that the quadrature variance of the two-mode light is less in the absence of spontaneous emission when and is anticipated to be bigger in the absence of spontaneous emission when for the quadrature variance of two light modes. Finally, we discovered from Figure 5 that the maximum quadrature squeezing for both light modes is 43.42 percent and that the plots intersect at the spot.
6. Conclusion
A coherently driven three-level atom with an open cavity coupled to a two-mode vacuum reservoir by a single port mirror has its quantum features thoroughly examined. The master equation was used to find the steady-state solutions of the equations of motion for linear operators and the equation of evolution of the expectation values of atomic operators with stable solutions. Using steady state solutions of the equations of motion for linear operators and equations of evolution of the expectation values, we estimated the mean photon number, the photon number variance, and the quadrature variance for single-mode cavity light beams as well as two-mode light beams. We also calculated quadrature squeezing for the two mode-lights. The mean photon number, the variance of the photon number for light mode a, the variance of the photon number for the two-mode cavity light, and the quadrature variance of light mode a for γ = 0 is greater than for γ = 0.1. From the plots of variance of the photon number of light mode b cross each other at the point Ω=0.55. This shows that when Ω<0.55 the variance of the photon number for γ=0 is greater than for γ=0.1 and vice versa. From the calculation the quadrature variance of light mode b for γ=0 is less than for γ=0.1. The quadrature variance of the two-mode cavity light is less in the absence of spontaneous emission when Ω<0.24 and grater in the absence of luminescence when Ω>0.24. The plots of quadrature squeezing cross each other at the point Ω=0.24. When Ω<0.24, the quadrature squeezing for γ=0 is greater than that for γ=0.1 and vice versa. Finally, it was found that the maximum quadrature squeezing of the two-mode cavity light is 43.42% for both γ=0 and γ=0.1 below the vacuum-state level.
Funding: This research received no external funding.
Acknowledgments: I would like to thank the anonymous reviewers of the paper for their useful comments.
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