4.6 Article

Observation of blackbody radiation enhanced superradiance in ultracold Rydberg gases

Journal

NEW JOURNAL OF PHYSICS
Volume 23, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/1367-2630/ac136c

Keywords

Rydberg atom; superradiance; quantum nonlinear optics

Funding

  1. National Key R&D Program of China [2017YFA0304203]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [61775124, 11804202, 61835007, 11904104, 11975098]
  3. Shanghai Sailing Program [18YF1407100]
  4. International Postdoctoral Exchange Fellowship Program [20180040]
  5. EPSRC [EP/R04340X/1]
  6. UKIERI-UGC Thematic Partnership [IND/CONT/G/16-17/73]
  7. Royal Society through the International Exchanges Cost Share award [IEC\NSFC\181078]
  8. EPSRC [EP/R04340X/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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An ensemble of excited atoms can synchronize emission of light collectively in a process known as superradiance, which is strongly influenced by the surrounding electromagnetic fields. Enhanced by microwave photons from blackbody radiation, superradiance of Rydberg atoms is observed and studied, providing insights into collective photon-atom interactions and potential applications in blackbody thermometry.
An ensemble of excited atoms can synchronize emission of light collectively in a process known as superradiance when its characteristic size is smaller than the wavelength of emitted photons. The underlying superradiance depends strongly on electromagnetic (photon) fields surrounding the atomic ensemble. High mode densities of microwave photons from 300 K blackbody radiation (BBR) significantly enhance decay rates of Rydberg states to neighbouring states, enabling superradiance that is not possible with bare vacuum induced spontaneous decay. Here we report observations of the superradiance of ultracold Rydberg atoms embedded in a bath of room-temperature photons. The temporal evolution of the Rydberg |nD⟩ to |(n + 1)P⟩ superradiant decay of Cs atoms (n the principal quantum number) is measured directly in free space. Theoretical simulations confirm the BBR enhanced superradiance in large Rydberg ensembles. We demonstrate that the van der Waals interactions between Rydberg atoms change the superradiant dynamics and modify the scaling of the superradiance. In the presence of static electric fields, we find that the superradiance becomes slow, potentially due to many-body interaction induced dephasing. Our study provides insights into many-body dynamics of interacting atoms coupled to thermal BBR, and might open a route to the design of blackbody thermometry at microwave frequencies via collective, dissipative photon-atom interactions.

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