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arxiv: 2402.06439 · v1 · pith:U67Q5JDJnew · submitted 2024-02-09 · 🪐 quant-ph · physics.optics

Selective Radiance in Super-Wavelength Atomic Arrays

classification 🪐 quant-ph physics.optics
keywords arrayssuper-wavelengthatomicefficientemissionatom-lightinterfacesmode
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A novel way to create efficient atom-light interfaces is to engineer collective atomic states that selectively radiate into a target optical mode by suppressing emission into undesired modes through destructive interference. While it is generally assumed that this approach requires dense atomic arrays with sub-wavelength lattice constants, here we show that selective radiance can also be achieved in arrays with super-wavelength spacing. By stacking multiple two-dimensional arrays we find super-wavelength mirror configurations where one can eliminate emission into unwanted diffraction orders while enhancing emission into the desired specular mode, leading to near-perfect reflection of weak resonant light. These super-wavelength arrays can also be functionalized into efficient quantum memories, with error probabilities on the order of ~1 for a trilayer with only around ~100 atoms per layer. Relaxing the previous constraint of sub-wavelength spacing could potentially ease the technical requirements for realizing efficient atom-light interfaces, such as enabling the use of tweezer arrays.

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