4.6 Article

Stimulated Raman adiabatic passage among degenerate-level manifolds

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW A
Volume 70, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevA.70.053405

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We examine the conditions needed to accomplish stimulated Raman adiabatic passage (STIRAP) when the three levels (ground g, excited e, and final f) are degenerate, with arbitrary couplings contributing to the pump-pulse interaction (g-e) and to the Stokes-pulse interaction (e-f). We show that in general a sufficient condition for complete population removal from the g set of degenerate states for arbitrary, pure or mixed, initial state is that the degeneracies should not decrease along the sequence g, e, and f. Using a sequence of unitary transformations we demonstrate that when this condition holds it is possible to achieve the degenerate counterpart of conventional STIRAP, whereby adiabatic passage produces complete population transfer. Indeed, the system is equivalent to a set of independent three-state systems, in each of which a STIRAP procedure can be implemented. We also examine the cases when this degeneracy constraint does not hold and show what can be accomplished in those cases. For example, for angular momentum states when the degeneracy of the g and f levels is less than that of the e level we show how a special choice for the pulse polarizations and phases can produce complete removal of population from the g set. Our scheme can be a powerful tool for coherent control in degenerate systems, because of its robustness, when selective addressing of the states is not required or impossible. We illustrate the analysis with several analytically solvable examples, in which the degeneracies originate from angular momentum orientation, as expressed by magnetic sublevels.

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