Theory of two-photon micromaser: competition among different transition processes
Sun Wei-Hui (孙为辉)ab, Du Si-De (杜四德)a, Chen Xiao-Shuang (陈效双)c
a Department of Physics, Fudan University, Shanghai 200433, China; b Surface Physics Laboratory (National Key Laboratory), Fudan University, Shanghai 200433, China; c National Laboratory for Infrared Physics, Shanghai Institute of Technical Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, 500 Yu-Tian Road, Shanghai 200083, China
Abstract We have investigated the steady-state cavity-field properties of a single-mode two-photon micromaser when the atoms in a cascade three-level configuration are initially prepared in a mixture of the upper and intermediate states. The mean photon number, trapping state and sub-Poissonian effect are discussed with upper (intermediate)-state population changing from 1(0) to 0(1). These properties are very different from those in a pure two- or one-photon transition process, due to the competition among different transition processes. In particular, the trapping states of nonzero photons are discovered in this system under some conditions, which is contrary to the previous findings.
Received: 11 May 2005
Revised: 26 October 2005
Accepted manuscript online:
Fund: Project supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China, the National Key Basic Research Special Foundation of China, the Major Program of the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant No 10234040), and the Shanghai Foundation for Development of Science and Technology (Grant No 02DJ14066).
Cite this article:
Sun Wei-Hui (孙为辉), Du Si-De (杜四德), Chen Xiao-Shuang (陈效双) Theory of two-photon micromaser: competition among different transition processes 2006 Chinese Physics 15 375
Altmetric calculates a score based on the online attention an article receives. Each coloured thread in the circle represents a different type of online attention. The number in the centre is the Altmetric score. Social media and mainstream news media are the main sources that calculate the score. Reference managers such as Mendeley are also tracked but do not contribute to the score. Older articles often score higher because they have had more time to get noticed. To account for this, Altmetric has included the context data for other articles of a similar age.