Near-Infrared Atomic Two-Level Systems
- Near-infrared atomic two-level systems are engineered configurations that isolate a closed cycling transition in ultrathin rubidium cells for controlled light–matter interactions.
- The design uses anodically bonded sub‑micron vapor cells where strong wall-induced relaxation suppresses optical pumping, ensuring Doppler and state filtering.
- Key applications include on-chip quantum memories and telecom-frequency references, with performance confirmed by Lorentzian spectral characteristics and high-bandwidth operation.
Near-infrared atomic two-level systems are effective atomic configurations engineered for robust, controllable light-matter interactions within the near-infrared spectrum, particularly at telecom-band wavelengths. These systems are realized by confining alkali atomic vapors, such as rubidium, within sub-micron-thick cells, where strong wall-induced relaxation mechanisms dominate atomic coherence. In this regime, a closed cycling transition—specifically, the 5S₁/₂, F=3 → 5P₃/₂, F=4 → 4D₅/₂, F=5 ladder in rubidium—enables the effective isolation of atomic dynamics to a two-level configuration, even in the presence of multiple hyperfine states. Confined geometries suppress optical pumping into uncoupled states, establishing a platform suitable for integrated quantum photonics, on-chip quantum memories, and telecom-frequency references (Orr et al., 22 Jan 2026).
1. Ultrathin Cell Design and Atomic Configuration
Near-infrared two-level systems leverage strongly confined alkali vapor cells. The cell consists of two glass substrates joined by anodic bonding, with the active region comprising channels of length 40 mm, width 1 mm, and thicknesses m, m, and m, alongside a control region of m. Natural rubidium vapor (approx. 72% Rb, 28% Rb) fills the channels, introduced after baking the assembly to – Torr (Orr et al., 22 Jan 2026).
The core atomic ladder transition addressed in Rb is as follows:
- Probe transition: at nm, probe detuning MHz.
- Coupling transition: at nm, in the telecom C-band.
Key hyperfine splittings are:
- Ground state: MHz;
- Intermediate: MHz;
- Upper: MHz, MHz.
The cells are operated at C, yielding rubidium number densities , with negligible self-broadening. Optical beams are phase- and power-stabilized, spatially filtered, and counter-propagated through the thin cell under -metal shielding.
2. Coherent and Incoherent Atomic Dynamics
Master Equation and Hamiltonian
Atomic population and coherence dynamics are captured by a density-matrix master equation: where is the rotating-frame interaction Hamiltonian,
Here, and are the respective Rabi frequencies.
Dissipative Processes
Two principal Lindblad terms govern dissipation:
- Spontaneous decay with rates MHz, MHz, and branching ratios .
- Wall-collision-induced relaxation, where atoms collide with the confining windows at a rate , with the longitudinal atomic velocity. This increases population and coherence decay rates: for excited state , ; for off-diagonal , total dephasing is .
Optical Bloch Equations
At steady state (), reduced Bloch equations describe key coherences such as , affected by both radiative and wall-induced processes, and the populations in ground, intermediate, and excited manifolds.
3. Velocity and State Filtering via Strong Confinement
In ultrathin cells (m), reaches $50$–$600$ MHz, greatly exceeding both hyperfine splittings and optical-pumping rates. This regime yields two crucial effects:
- Suppression of optical pumping: The rate for populating uncoupled states () becomes negligible versus , preventing accumulation in off-cycle states.
- Doppler/velocity selection: Atoms with sufficient to be Doppler-shifted into noncycling transitions are efficiently filtered out, because m/s for m, while the required m/s.
As a result, only the slowest atoms and the closed cycling line contribute measurably to the optical response. Spectral lineshapes, both in probe (DROP) absorption and fluorescence (FDROP), collapse to a single Lorentzian with width .
| Parameter | Macroscopic Cell (m) | Ultrathin Cell (m) |
|---|---|---|
| Doppler Broadening | MHz | Minor |
| Wall Rate () | MHz | $50$–$600$ MHz |
| Lineshape | Several transitions | Single Lorentzian |
4. Effective Two-Level System: Reduced Description
Isolation Conditions
Effective two-level behavior emerges if m such that . In this limit, only the cycling transition
remains resonant for atoms surviving both velocity and wall filtering, while other transitions are off-resonant or rapidly damped.
Reduced Hamiltonian and Dynamics
The isolated two-level system can be described by: with two-photon detuning and effective coupling (in the far-off-resonant picture).
Steady-state excited-state population is given by a Lorentzian: with effective total decay .
5. Spectroscopic and Fluorescence Characterization
Transmission and fluorescence are quantitatively described by integration over the Maxwell–Boltzmann distribution of . Key observables include:
- Probe-beam absorption (DROP):
- Fluorescence (FDROP, coupling-induced):
Experiments confirm that for ultrathin cells, both DROP and FDROP lines reduce to a single Lorentzian of width , consistent with theoretical predictions.
6. Applications, Integration, and Scalability
Near-infrared atomic two-level systems in sub-micron Rb vapor cells enable several photonic quantum technologies:
- On-chip quantum memories: The isolated transition at m allows storage of telecom-band photons by controlled Rabi flopping; m-thick cells are suitable for integration with photonic waveguides.
- Frequency references: The narrow (100 MHz) cycling line serves as a compact reference for telecom lasers without requiring Doppler-free setups.
- Quantum information processing: The platform supports high-bandwidth ( GHz) light–matter interaction, and development toward coherent spin-wave memories in buffer-gas-coated ultrathin cells is feasible.
Key technical challenges for integration include:
- Fabrication: Sub-m channel devices via anodic bonding require lithographic precision, with surface roughness nm.
- Thermal management: Maintaining C in integrated devices demands localized heating and robust thermal insulation.
- Photon collection and interfacing: Efficient in- and out-coupling to sub-mm channels necessitates micro-lenses or tapered photonic waveguides optimized for minimal loss.
A plausible implication is that the demonstrated isolation and control over near-infrared two-level systems pave the way for scalable, chip-integrated atomic-photonic architectures with direct application to quantum networks and precision metrology (Orr et al., 22 Jan 2026).