Abstract
Microlasers, relying on the strong coupling between active particles and optical microcavity, exhibit fundamental differences from conventional lasers, such as multi-threshold/thresholdless behavior and nonclassical photon emission. As light sources, microlasers possess extensive applications in precision measurement, quantum information processing, and biochemical sensing. Here we propose a whispering-gallery-mode microlaser scheme, where ultracold alkaline-earth metal atoms, i.e., gain medium, are tightly confined in a two-color evanescent lattice that is in the ring shape and formed around a microsphere. To suppress the influence of the lattice-induced ac Stark shift on the moderately-narrow-linewidth laser transition, the red-detuned trapping beams operate at a magic wavelength while the wavelength of the blue-detuned trapping beam is set close to the other magic wavelength. The tiny mode volume and high quality factor of the microsphere ensure the strong atom-microcavity coupling in the bad-cavity regime. As a result, both saturation photon and critical atom numbers, which characterize the laser performance, are substantially reduced below unity. We explore the lasing action of the coupled system by using the Monte Carlo approach. Our scheme may be potentially generalized to the microlasers based on the forbidden clock transitions, holding the prospect for microscale active optical clocks in precision measurement and frequency metrology.
Similar content being viewed by others
Introduction
Microlasers, which are on the basis of intracavity particles strongly interacting with individual photons, possess unique properties, such as sub-millimeter dimension, multiple thresholds1/nonthreshold2, and nonclassical radiation3. Thus far, microlasers have been widely applied in photonic integrated circuits4, nanoplasmonics5, quantum information processing and computing6, and biochemical and optomechanical sensing7,8,9. The size of a particle-cavity coupled system is usually measured by two dimensionless parameters3,10, saturation photon number \({N}_{\mathrm{p}}^{\mathrm{s}}={\gamma }^{2}/4{g}^{2}\) and critical particle number \({N}_{\mathrm{a}}^{\mathrm{c}}=\kappa \gamma /4{g}^{2}\) with the loss rate κ of intracavity photons, the relaxation rate γ of the laser transition of active particles, and the coupling strength \(g\) between one particle and one photon. When the number of intracavity photons exceeds \({N}_{\mathrm{p}}^{\mathrm{s}}\), the rate of stimulated emission from an atom surpasses the rate of spontaneous emission from this atom. By contrast, \({N}_{\mathrm{a}}^{\mathrm{c}}\) characterizes the half of the critical population inversion (i.e., laser threshold) for the laser activity. That is, the laser action occurs when the population inversion of active atoms is larger than \(2{N}_{\mathrm{a}}^{\mathrm{c}}\). Indeed, \({N}_{\mathrm{a}}^{\mathrm{c}}\) is related to the so-called cooperativity parameter10 \(\mathcal{C}=1/2{N}_{\mathrm{a}}^{\mathrm{c}}\). The conventional lasers operate with \(\left({N}_{\mathrm{p}}^{\mathrm{s}},{N}_{\mathrm{a}}^{\mathrm{c}}\right)\gg 1\), thereby requiring a large number of particles and photons to sustain the laser oscillation. By contrast, the size of a laser system is significantly suppressed in the strong-coupling limit, \(\left({N}_{\mathrm{p}}^{\mathrm{s}},{N}_{\mathrm{a}}^{\mathrm{c}}\right)\ll 1\), where even one photon can saturate the particle’s transition and even one particle can strongly affect the intracavity field. Consequently, interesting quantum effects, such as single-photon emission and thresholdless lasing3, are exhibited.
Suppressing \(\left({N}_{\mathrm{p}}^{\mathrm{s}},{N}_{\mathrm{a}}^{\mathrm{c}}\right)\) relies on a large particle-cavity coupling strength \(g\) that is proportional to \(\sqrt{Q/{V}_{\text{eff}}}\) with the quality factor \(Q\) and effective mode volume Veff of the cavity3,10. Thus far, various particle-cavity structures have accessed the strong-coupling regime, including one atom/ion/molecule/quantum dot situated in an optical cavity3,11,12,13, a superconducting qubit interacting with an LC resonator via the electric/magnetic field (i.e., circuit QED14), and single molecule placed inside a plasmonic nanocavity at room temperature15. In comparison, the whispering-gallery-mode (WGM) microcavities, which confine the optical waves by means of the total internal reflection, own the features of ultrahigh \(Q\) factor (~ 109)16,17 and tiny mode volume (a few hundreds of µm3 measured according to the maximum light intensity inside the microcavity18). Thus, the WGM microcavities are an excellent platform for implementing microlasers19,20.
Recently, the strong coupling between cold caesium atoms and a toroidal microcavity has been demonstrated in21,22. However, the short transient interaction time (~ µs) seriously restricts the implementation of a microlaser. To this end, confining active particles in an optical lattice potential that is formed inside or in the vicinity of a microcavity is an efficient solution23,24. The particle-cavity interaction time may be extended over 102 s25. In addition, the particles moving in the so-called Lamb–Dicke regime, where the ground-vibrational-state size of a particle in a potential trap is much smaller than the radiation wavelength of the particle, allows a Doppler-free as well as recoil-free spectroscopy26. Further, when the trapping laser beams operate at the so-called magic wavelengths, two laser-transition states of the particles have the same dynamical polarizability and experience the same trap-induced ac Stark shift27. This is of particular importance to the application in the field of time and frequency metrology. A few methods have been proposed for trapping neutral atoms around WGM microcavities, such as the three-level atoms interacting with two WGMs of a microcavity28,29 and the two-color evanescent trap formed around a microcavity30. However, none of them operate at the magic-wavelength condition.
In this work, we propose a WGM microlaser scheme with a small number of neutral 88Sr atoms strongly interacting with a high-\(Q\) microsphere. The (5s2)1S0–(5s5p)3P1 (m = 0) intercombination transition is chosen as the laser transition. Ultracold atoms are trapped in a ring-shaped evanescent lattice that is formed around the microsphere. The trapping-beam wavelengths include one red-detuned magic wavelength and one blue-detuned wavelength that is close to the other magic wavelength. The two-color lattice potential contains tens of sites with each site depth reaching tens of µK. The effective WGM volume Veff is about \(827\) µm3, leading to an atom-microcavity coupling strength as high as \(g\sim 2\mathrm{\pi }\times 2.8\) MHz. The resultant saturation photon \({N}_{\mathrm{p}}^{\mathrm{s}}\) and critical particle \({N}_{\mathrm{a}}^{\mathrm{c}}\) numbers are well below unity. The properties of the microlasing action with a few atoms interacting with the microcavity is studied through the Monte Carlo wave-function method. Our microlaser scheme paves the way towards micro-sized light sources for photonic integrated circuits and sensing applications.
Results
Physical model
Figure 1a illustrates the schematic diagram of the atom-microcavity coupled system under study. An ensemble of neutral 88Sr atoms is confined in a ring-shaped optical lattice (in the \(x-y\) plane) that is formed around a silica microsphere (radius R). An external magnetic field B (in the \(y-z\) plane) is applied to define the quantization axis. The angle of B with respect to the \({\mathbf{e}}_{\mathrm{z}}\) axis is θB. A pair of TE-polarized clockwise (CW) and counterclockwise (CCW) WGMs are resonantly coupled to the \(\left| S \right\rangle\)−\(\left| P \right\rangle\) intercombination transition of 88Sr via the evanescent field. Here, we have defined \(\left| S \right\rangle\)≡ (5s2)1S0 and \(\left| P \right\rangle\) ≡ (5s5p)3P1 (m = 0). The transition wavelength in free space is \({\lambda }_{0}=689.45\) nm with a moderately narrow linewidth \(\gamma =2\mathrm{\pi }\times 7.5\) kHz (Fig. 1b). The tiny mode volume of the microsphere allows the access to the strong-coupling regime and further the implementation of a microlaser.
The ring-shaped optical lattice is created by combining the evanescent fields of a blue-detuned travelling WGM and a red-detuned standing-wave WGM in microsphere. Both WGMs are TE-polarized and far-off-resonance with respect to λ0, thereby suppressing the inelastic photon scattering by atoms. All trapping beams are linearly polarized along the z-direction and coupled into the microsphere through a tapered fiber that is aligned along the y-direction (Fig. 1a). The two-color evanescent trapping was firstly proposed and demonstrated in optical nanofibers and waveguides31,32,33,34, where the blue-detuned (red-detuned) optical potential pushes (attracts) atoms away from (towards) the dielectric surface. Here, we extend the relevant application to the WGM microsphere, where, in addition, two-color trapping beams operate at or close to the so-called magic wavelengths so that two atomic states \(\left| S \right\rangle\) and \(\left| P \right\rangle\) approximately experience the same ac Stark shift27.
We first consider choosing the microsphere’s radius R. A TE-polarized WGM in microsphere is characterized by a set of integers \(\left(n\ge 1,l\ge 0,m\right)\) with \(-l\le m\le l\). Actually, \(\left(n,l,m\right)\) denote \(n\), \(\left(l-\left|m\right|+1\right)\) and \(2\left|m\right|\) intensity maxima of the WGM along the radial, polar and azimuthal directions, respectively. A WGM with a small \(l\) enhances the evanescent field, facilitating a deep-enough optical potential and the strong atom-microcavity coupling19. For a certain \(l\), the microsphere’s radius R should be determined by the atomic transition frequency \({\omega }_{0}=2\mathrm{\pi }c/{\lambda }_{0}\). The refractive index of silica at a light wavelength λ can be evaluated by using the Sellmeier formula for the relative permittivity.
In above equation, λ is in units of µm. According to the explicit asymptotic formula of the resonance frequency of a \(\left(n,l,m\right)\) WGM derived in35, we set R = 5.03 µm and the intercombination transition of 88Sr resonantly interacts with the fundamental CW \(\left({n}_{0}=1,{l}_{0}=60,{m}_{0}\right)\) and CCW \(\left({n}_{0}=1,{l}_{0}=60,-{m}_{0}\right)\) WGMs with \({m}_{0}={l}_{0}\). In what follows, we name \(\left({n}_{0},{l}_{0},\pm {m}_{0}\right)\) the lasing modes.
Before computing the optical potential, we first consider the blue-detuned travelling \({\mathbf{E}}_{\mathrm{b}}\) and red-detuned standing-wave \({\mathbf{E}}_{\mathrm{r}}\) WGMs that are used to trap 88Sr atoms. The blue-detuned trapping beam (\({\mathbf{e}}_{\mathrm{z}}\)-polarization, wavelength in free space \({\lambda }_{\mathrm{b}}<{\lambda }_{0}\) and wavenumber \({k}_{\mathrm{b}}=2\mathrm{\pi }/{\lambda }_{\mathrm{b}}\)) is coupled into the fundamental TE-polarized WGM \(\left({n}_{\mathrm{b}},{l}_{\mathrm{b}},{m}_{\mathrm{b}}={l}_{\mathrm{b}}\right)\) in microsphere via the tapered fiber (Fig. 1a). In spherical coordinates \(\left(\rho ,\theta ,\varphi \right)\), the amplitude vector of the blue-detuned WGM consists of the intracavity field (inside the microsphere)36.
and the evanescent field (outside the microsphere).
with the Riccati–Bessel functions \({\psi }_{l}\left(\zeta \right)=\zeta {j}_{l}\left(\zeta \right)\), \({\xi }_{l}\left(\zeta \right)={\psi }_{l}\left(\zeta \right)-i{\chi }_{l}\left(\zeta \right)\), and \({\chi }_{l}\left(\zeta \right)=-\zeta {n}_{l}\left(\zeta \right)\). Here, \({j}_{l}\left(\zeta \right)\) and \({n}_{l}\left(\zeta \right)\) are the spherical Bessel functions of the first and second kind, respectively, of the order \(l\). The vector harmonics is defined as \({\text{X}}_{l,m}\left(\theta ,\varphi \right)=\left[\nabla {Y}_{l,m}\left(\theta ,\varphi \right)\right]\times \mathbf{r}\) with the spherical harmonics \({Y}_{l,m}\left(\theta ,\varphi \right)\). The boundary conditions at the microsphere’s surface give the relation between amplitudes Ei,b and Eo,b
and the modal equation for the resonance wavelength λb.
By contrast, two counter-propagating red-detuned laser beams (\({\mathbf{e}}_{\mathrm{z}}\)-polarization, wavelength in free space \({\lambda }_{\mathrm{r}}>{\lambda }_{0}\) and wavenumber \({k}_{\mathrm{r}}=2\mathrm{\pi }/{\lambda }_{\mathrm{r}}\)) are respectively coupled into the degenerate TE-polarized \(\left({n}_{\mathrm{r}},{l}_{\mathrm{r}},\pm {m}_{\mathrm{r}}\right)\) WGMs with \({m}_{\mathrm{r}}={l}_{\mathrm{r}}-2\), forming a ring-shaped standing wave in microsphere. Here, we do not choose the fundamental WGMs to form the standing wave for the reason of creating a closed three-dimensional optical trap. The amplitude vector of the standing-wave WGM contains the intracavity component.
and the evanescent component.
According to the boundary conditions at the microsphere’s surface, one has the relation.
and the modal equation for the resonance wavelength λr.
For the convenience of analysis, we further simplify the expression of the vector spherical harmonics \({\text{X}}_{l,m}\left(\theta ,\varphi \right)\). The polarizations of two-color trapping WGMs are mainly along the polar direction \({\mathbf{e}}_{\theta }\) when \(R\gg {\lambda }_{u=\mathrm{b},\mathrm{r}}\). In addition, the intracavity light fields are tightly confined in the vicinity of the equator of the microsphere, i.e., \(\theta \sim \mathrm{\pi }/2+\delta \theta \). Thus, the harmonic vector \({\text{X}}_{l,m}\left(\theta ,\varphi \right)\) with \(l={l}_{u=\mathrm{b},\mathrm{r}}\) and \(m={m}_{u=\mathrm{b},\mathrm{r}}\) is reduced to.
with the Hermite polynomials \({H}_{q}\left(\zeta \right)\) of the degree q, and thus, the evanescent fields \({\mathbf{E}}_{u=\mathrm{b},\mathrm{r}}\left(\rho >R,\theta ,\varphi \right)\) are approximately polarized in the \({\mathbf{e}}_{\mathrm{z}}\) axis.
After obtaining \({\mathbf{E}}_{\mathrm{b}}\) and \({\mathbf{E}}_{\mathrm{r}}\), we consider the optical potential for trapping 88Sr atoms. The optical potentials produced by far-off-resonance blue- and red-detuned evanescent fields take the form.
where \({\alpha }_{j=\mathrm{S},\mathrm{P}}\) denotes the dynamic polarizability of the atom in \(\left| S \right\rangle\) and \(\left| P \right\rangle\), respectively. The polarizability \({\alpha }_{j=\mathrm{S},\mathrm{P}}\) depends on the trapping beam wavelength \({\lambda }_{u=\mathrm{b},\mathrm{r}}\) and the quantization direction θB and can be computed by using the approach in37 and the data listed in38 (see “Methods”). As pointed out in27, setting \({\lambda }_{u=\mathrm{b},\mathrm{r}}\) at the so-called magic wavelengths minimizes the trapping-beam-induced ac Stark shift of the \(\left| S \right\rangle\) −\(\left| P \right\rangle\) intercombination line and also maximizes the spatial overlap between external motions of the atom in \(\left| S \right\rangle\) and \(\left| P \right\rangle\). However, it is challenging to find a pair of \(\left({n}_{\mathrm{b}},{l}_{\mathrm{b}},{m}_{\mathrm{b}}\right)\) and \(\left({n}_{\mathrm{r}},{l}_{\mathrm{r}},\pm {m}_{\mathrm{r}}\right)\) WGMs that simultaneously satisfy the magic-wavelength conditions for a given radius R (determined by the lasing WGMs) of the microsphere. In this case, we choose the red-detuned standing-wave WGM operating at the magic wavelength while the wavelength of the blue-detuned travelling WGM is set close to the other magic wavelength.
In26, it shows that the red-detuned magic λr, at which \({\alpha }_{\mathrm{S}}\left({\lambda }_{\mathrm{r}},{\theta }_{\text{B}}\right)={\alpha }_{\mathrm{P}}\left({\lambda }_{\mathrm{r}},{\theta }_{\text{B}}\right)\), may be situated in the range from 810 to 930 nm, depending on θB. We choose the standing-wave WGM as \(\left({n}_{\mathrm{r}}=1,{l}_{\mathrm{r}}=49,\pm {m}_{\mathrm{r}}\right)\) with \({m}_{\mathrm{r}}=47\) and obtain \({\lambda }_{\mathrm{r}}=832.69\) nm from Eq. (9). Figure 2a illustrates the corresponding light-field distribution, where \(\left({l}_{\mathrm{r}}-{m}_{\mathrm{r}}+1\right)\) maxima are presented in the plane perpendicular to the equator of the microsphere while the light field exhibits a ring-shaped lattice pattern in the equatorial plane with the number of lattice sites equal to 2mr. It is found that the polarizability difference \(\mathrm{\Delta }{\alpha }_{\mathrm{r}}\left({\lambda }_{\mathrm{r}},{\theta }_{\text{B}}\right)={\alpha }_{\mathrm{S}}\left({\lambda }_{\mathrm{r}},{\theta }_{\text{B}}\right)-{\alpha }_{\mathrm{P}}\left({\lambda }_{\mathrm{r}},{\theta }_{\text{B}}\right)\) is cancelled at \({\theta }_{\text{B}}={55.45}^{^\circ }\) (see Methods). The corresponding atomic polarizability is evaluated as \({\alpha }_{\mathrm{r}}\equiv {\alpha }_{\mathrm{S}}\left({\lambda }_{\mathrm{r}},{\theta }_{\text{B}}\right)={\alpha }_{\mathrm{P}}\left({\lambda }_{\mathrm{r}},{\theta }_{\text{B}}\right)=0.27\) a.u. (atomic units) and one has the red-detuned optical potential.
That is, the atom experiences the same red-detuned optical potential when it is in \(\left| S \right\rangle\) and \(\left| P \right\rangle\). The rates of change of \(\mathrm{\Delta }{\alpha }_{\mathrm{r}}\left({\lambda }_{\mathrm{r}},{\theta }_{\text{B}}\right)\) with respect to λr and θB are computed as \(\partial \mathrm{\Delta }{\alpha }_{\mathrm{r}}\left({\lambda }_{\mathrm{r}},{\theta }_{\text{B}}\right)/\partial {\lambda }_{\mathrm{r}}=-7.76\times {10}^{-4}\) a.u. per nm and \(\partial \mathrm{\Delta }{\alpha }_{\mathrm{r}}\left({\lambda }_{\mathrm{r}},{\theta }_{\text{B}}\right)/\partial {\theta }_{\text{B}}=1.73\times {10}^{-4}\) a.u. per millidegree, respectively. The current optical and atomic physics techniques ensure that the influence of the intensity fluctuations of the trapping beams and the misalignment of the magnetic field direction on the intercombination transition of 88Sr can be well below its intrinsic linewidth γ.
In addition, as demonstrated in39, the blue-detuned magic wavelength may be found around 390 nm. Thus, we choose the travelling WGM as \(\left({n}_{\mathrm{b}}=1,{l}_{\mathrm{b}}=109,{m}_{\mathrm{b}}=109\right)\) with \({\lambda }_{\mathrm{b}}=392.58\) nm. The corresponding light-field distribution has only one maximum in the polar direction and is independent of the azimuth angle (Fig. 2a). At λb and \({\theta }_{\text{B}}=55.45^\circ \), one obtains the dynamic polarizabilities \({\alpha }_{\mathrm{S}}\left({\lambda }_{\mathrm{b}},{\theta }_{\text{B}}\right)=-0.48\) a.u. and \({\alpha }_{\mathrm{P}}\left({\lambda }_{\mathrm{b}},{\theta }_{\text{B}}\right)=-0.49\) a.u. when the atom is in \(\left| S \right\rangle\) and \(\left| P \right\rangle\), respectively. The polarizability difference \(\mathrm{\Delta }{\alpha }_{\mathrm{b}}\left({\lambda }_{\mathrm{b}},{\theta }_{\text{B}}\right)={\alpha }_{\mathrm{S}}\left({\lambda }_{\mathrm{b}},{\theta }_{\text{B}}\right)-{\alpha }_{\mathrm{P}}\left({\lambda }_{\mathrm{b}},{\theta }_{\text{B}}\right)\) is about 0.01 a.u. with the rates of change \(\partial \mathrm{\Delta }{\alpha }_{\mathrm{b}}\left({\lambda }_{\mathrm{b}},{\theta }_{\text{B}}\right)/\partial {\lambda }_{\mathrm{b}}=1.2\times {10}^{-3}\) a.u. per nm and \(\partial \mathrm{\Delta }{\alpha }_{\mathrm{b}}\left({\lambda }_{\mathrm{b}},{\theta }_{\text{B}}\right)/\partial {\theta }_{\text{B}}=1.5\times {10}^{-5}\) a.u. per millidegree. Due to the small relative polarizability difference \(\mathrm{\Delta }{\alpha }_{\mathrm{b}}\left({\lambda }_{\mathrm{b}},{\theta }_{\text{B}}\right)/{\alpha }_{\mathrm{S},\mathrm{P}}\left({\lambda }_{\mathrm{b}},{\theta }_{\text{B}}\right)\sim -2.1\times {10}^{-2}\), one may approximate \({\alpha }_{\mathrm{b}}\equiv {\alpha }_{\mathrm{S}}\left({\lambda }_{\mathrm{b}},{\theta }_{\text{B}}\right)\approx {\alpha }_{\mathrm{P}}\left({\lambda }_{\mathrm{b}},{\theta }_{\text{B}}\right)\) and obtain.
i.e., the atom experiences approximately the same blue-detuned optical potential when it is in \(\left| S \right\rangle\) and \(\left| P \right\rangle\).
Besides optical potentials \({U}_{\mathrm{b},\mathrm{r}}\left(\rho >R,\theta ,\varphi \right)\), van der Walls potentials.
are also exerted on atoms near the microsphere’s surface. The coefficients \({C}_{3}^{\left(j=\mathrm{S},\mathrm{P}\right)}\) can be computed by27 \({C}_{3}^{\left(j\right)}=\frac{\hslash }{16{\mathrm{\pi }}^{2}{\varepsilon }_{0}}{\int }_{0}^{\infty }{\alpha }_{j}\left(i\xi \right)\frac{\epsilon \left(i\xi \right)-1}{\epsilon \left(i\xi \right)+1}d\xi \) and we have \({C}_{3}^{\left(\mathrm{S}\right)}=722.87\) Hz µm−3 and \({C}_{3}^{\left(\mathrm{P}\right)}=744.24\) Hz µm−3. Due to the small relative difference \(({C}_{3}^{\left(\mathrm{S}\right)}-{C}_{3}^{\left(\mathrm{P}\right)})/{C}_{3}^{\left(\mathrm{S},\mathrm{P}\right)}\sim -3.0\times {10}^{-2}\), one may approximate.
Consequently, the total potential exerted on the atom in \(\left| S \right\rangle\) and \(\left| P \right\rangle\) is expressed as:
The trapping beam powers are given by \({I}_{u=\mathrm{b},\mathrm{r}}=\left(c{\varepsilon }_{0}/2\right)\iint {\stackrel{\sim }{\epsilon }}_{u}\left(\rho \right){\left|{\mathbf{E}}_{u}\left(\rho ,\theta ,\varphi =0\right)\right|}^{2}\rho d\rho \mathrm{sin}\theta d\theta \) with the relative permittivity \({\stackrel{\sim }{\epsilon }}_{u}\left(\rho <R\right)=\epsilon \left({\lambda }_{u}\right)\) and \({\stackrel{\sim }{\epsilon }}_{u}\left(\rho >R\right)=1\). Adjusting \({I}_{\mathrm{b},\mathrm{r}}\) allows a three-dimensional trapping of 88Sr atoms in the vicinity of the microsphere’s surface.
Figure 2b displays the distribution of the lattice potential with \({I}_{\mathrm{r}}=27\) mW and \({I}_{\mathrm{b}}=87\) mW. There exists a potential well with a depth of 32 µK, large enough for trapping ultracold 88Sr atoms (temperature 0.4 µK40), in the plane perpendicular to the equator of the microsphere. The distance from the microsphere’s surface to the potential-well minimum is \(\left({\rho }_{0}-R\right)=137\) nm with the distance \({\rho }_{0}\) between the microsphere’s center and the potential well. In the equatorial plane, the trapping potential presents a ring-shaped lattice pattern and the number of lattice sites is 2mr. Solving the Schrödinger equation of an atom moving in an optical lattice site, one may derive the vibration frequencies \({\mathrm{\Omega }}_{\rho }=2\mathrm{\pi }\times 86\) kHz, \({\mathrm{\Omega }}_{\theta }=2\mathrm{\pi }\times 25\) kHz and \({\mathrm{\Omega }}_{\varphi }=2\mathrm{\pi }\times 145\) kHz along \({\text{e}}_{\rho }\), \({\text{e}}_{\theta }\) and \({\text{e}}_{\varphi }\), respectively (see Methods). The corresponding Lamb–Dicke parameters are \(\left\{{\eta }_{i=\rho ,\theta ,\varphi }={k}_{0}\sqrt{\hslash /2M{\mathrm{\Omega }}_{i}}\right\}=\left\{\mathrm{0.23,0.43,0.18}\right\}\) with the mass of atom M. In the Lamb–Dicke regime, \({\eta }_{i=\rho ,\theta ,\varphi }^{2}\ll 1\), the transition of an atom between two internal states \(\left| S \right\rangle\) and \(\left| P \right\rangle\) hardly affects its external (motional/vibrational) states, i.e., free of photon-recoil shifts. The lifetime of a confined atom in \(\left| S \right\rangle\) is determined by the rate of the atom scattering the trapping-beam photons and reaches as long as 103 s (see Methods). By contrast, the lifetime of a confined atom in \(\left| P \right\rangle\) is primarily limited by the intrinsic decay rate γ of the intercombination transition. Finally, it is worth noting that the ring-shaped lattice pattern shown in Fig. 2b is similar to the stationary interference pattern of the composite WGMs that have different wavelengths but share the same resonance frequency41,42,43.
Strong atom-microcavity coupling
We now consider the atom-microcavity interaction. The coupling strength between the lasing \(\left({n}_{0},{l}_{0},\pm {m}_{0}\right)\) WGMs and the \(\left| S \right\rangle\)–\(\left| P \right\rangle\) transition of 88Sr is given by.
where F is the so-called Purcell factor,
\(Q={\omega }_{0}/\kappa \) denotes the quality factor of the lasing WGMs with the total photon loss rate κ, and \({V}_{\text{eff}}\) gives the effective mode volume,
with the WGM light field \({\mathbf{E}}_{0}\left(\mathbf{r}\right)\) and the location \({\mathbf{r}}_{\mathrm{a}}\) of an atom in a lattice site. For the lattice potential shown in Fig. 2b, Veff is evaluated as 827 µm3, which is ten thousand times smaller than that of a common Fabry–Pérot cavity44 and results in \(g=2\pi \times 2.8\) MHz. The corresponding saturation photon number is extremely small, \({N}_{\mathrm{p}}^{\mathrm{s}}=2\times {10}^{-6}\).
The strong atom-cavity coupling requires \(Q\) to be high enough that \({N}_{\mathrm{a}}^{\mathrm{c}}\ll 1\). The quality factor of the lasing \(\left({n}_{0},{l}_{0},\pm {m}_{0}\right)\) WGMs is given by.
where \({Q}_{\mathrm{r}\mathrm{a}\mathrm{d}}\), \({Q}_{\mathrm{m}\mathrm{a}\mathrm{t}}\), \({Q}_{\mathrm{s}\mathrm{s}}\), \({Q}_{\mathrm{s}\mathrm{a}}\), and \({Q}_{\mathrm{c}}\) quantify the optical loss mechanisms of radiation, material attenuation, surface scattering, surface adsorption, and microsphere-fiber coupling, respectively. The radiation loss is attributed to the fact that a portion of intracavity light leaks out of the microsphere each time when the light beam hits on the microsphere’s surface. The relevant quality factor is evaluated by45.
with the shorthand
and the \({n}_{0}\)-th root \({u}_{{n}_{0}}\) of the Airy function \(\mathrm{Ai}\left(-u\right)\). The radiation-loss-limited quality factor is computed as \({Q}_{\mathrm{r}\mathrm{a}\mathrm{d}}=1.5\times {10}^{8}\), much lower than that of a typical microsphere16. This is because the microsphere’s radius R here is substantially reduced so as to enhance the evanescent field and suppress the effective mode volume Veff. The material-loss-limited \({Q}_{\mathrm{m}\mathrm{a}\mathrm{t}}\) takes the form.
with the attenuation coefficient \({\alpha }_{\mathrm{m}\mathrm{a}\mathrm{t}}\). Generally, \({\alpha }_{\mathrm{m}\mathrm{a}\mathrm{t}}\) of the silica is composed of the Rayleigh scattering and the material absorption. At \({\lambda }_{0}\), \({\alpha }_{\mathrm{m}\mathrm{a}\mathrm{t}}\) approximates46 6 dB km−1 and \({Q}_{\mathrm{m}\mathrm{a}\mathrm{t}}\) is estimated as \(1.1\times {10}^{10}\). The surface-roughness-limited \({Q}_{\mathrm{s}\mathrm{s}}\) may be evaluated by.
with the standard deviation σ and spatial correlation length B of the surface roughness of microsphere17. In experiment, σ and B are measured to be 2 nm and 5 nm, respectively. One has \({Q}_{\mathrm{s}\mathrm{s}}=3.5\times {10}^{8}\), which is also restricted by the small radius R of the microsphere. The optical loss that is caused by the adsorbed water upon the microsphere’s surface leads to the quality factor component.
with the thickness δ and absorption coefficient β of the water layer17. The refractive index of water nwat has been listed in47. The typical value δ ~ 0.2 nm leads to \({Q}_{\mathrm{s}\mathrm{a}}=8\times {10}^{9}\).
The intracavity photons are extracted from the microcavity by using the same fiber-microcavity coupler. The external-coupling-limited \({Q}_{\mathrm{c}}\) can be adjusted by changing the distance between the microsphere and the tapered fiber. In the weak microsphere-fiber coupling limit, the total quality factor \(Q\) is mainly limited by the radiation loss \({Q}_{\mathrm{r}\mathrm{a}\mathrm{d}}\) and the microcavity output power is suppressed. We assume \(Q={10}^{8}\) with \(\kappa =2\mathrm{\pi }\times 4.4\) MHz and the corresponding Purcell factor F reaches \(\sim {10}^{3}\). The critical atom number is evaluated as \({N}_{\mathrm{a}}^{\mathrm{c}}={10}^{-3}\), much smaller than unity. By contrast, the relatively strong microsphere-fiber coupling with, for example, \({Q}_{\mathrm{c}}={10}^{7}\) limits the total \(Q\) factor, which reduces F to \(\sim {10}^{2}\) while increases \({N}_{\mathrm{a}}^{\mathrm{c}}\) to \({10}^{-2}\) (i.e., still well below unity) but enhances the microcavity output power. Therefore, the combined system operates in the strong coupling regime.
The dissipative dynamics of the atom-microsphere coupled system is governed by the master Eq.48.
where ρ is the combined density matrix and the Hamiltonian H describes the coherent interaction between atoms and two degenerate lasing WGMs.
with the creation \({a}_{i}^{\dagger}\) and annihilation \({a}_{i}\) operators for the \(i=\mathrm{C}\mathrm{W},\mathrm{C}\mathrm{C}\mathrm{W}\) WGM and the raising \({\sigma }_{u}^{\dagger}={\left(\left| P \right\rangle\left\langle\mathrm{S}\right|\right)}_{u}\) and lowering \({\sigma }_{u}={\left(\left|\mathrm{S}\right\rangle\left\langle\mathrm{P}\right|\right)}_{u}\) for the \(u\) th atom. Here, \({\varphi }_{u}\) denotes the azimuth angle at the position of the \(u\) th atom and N gives the number of trapped atoms. The dissipation terms \({\mathcal{D}}_{\mathrm{c}\mathrm{a}\mathrm{v}}\left(\rho \right)\) and \({\mathcal{D}}_{\mathrm{s}\mathrm{p}}\left(\rho \right)\) account for the photon loss and the spontaneous decay of \(\left| P \right\rangle\)-populated atoms, respectively, and take the Lindblad form.
To solve the master equation, we choose the Hilbert space to be spanned by an orthonormal set of product states, \( \left\{ {\left| \psi \right._{1} \otimes \ldots \otimes \left| \psi \right._{N} \otimes \left| {n_{{{\text{CW}}}} } \right. \otimes \left| {n_{{{\text{CCW}}}} } \right.;\psi = {\text{S}},{\text{P}};n_{{i = {\text{CW}},{\text{CCW}}}} = 0,1,2, \ldots } \right\} \). The master equation can be numerically simulated by using the Monte Carlo wave-function (MCWF) method49. Due to the limited computer memory, we restrict ourselves to the system with up to N = 7 atoms, i.e., less than ten percent lattice sites are occupied.
Spontaneous emission in microcavity
As pointed out in50, the spontaneous emission of an atom depends strongly on the environment it resides in. The environment may be tailored by an optical cavity and the resultant atomic fluorescence is directional and spectrally broadened by the Purcell factor F. Let us assume that all trapped atoms are initially prepared in \(\left| P \right\rangle\) and none intracavity photons exist. In addition, each lattice site is occupied by at most one atom. Using the MCWF approach, we simulate the time evolutions of intracavity photon numbers \({N}_{\mathrm{p},i=\mathrm{C}\mathrm{W},\mathrm{C}\mathrm{C}\mathrm{W}}\left(t\right)=\mathrm{Tr}\left[\rho \left(t\right){a}_{i}^{\dagger}{a}_{i}\right]\), the intermode correlation \({C}_{\mathrm{p}}\left(t\right)=\left|\mathrm{Tr}\left[\rho \left(t\right){a}_{\mathrm{C}\mathrm{W}}^{\dagger}{a}_{\mathrm{C}\mathrm{C}\mathrm{W}}\right]\right|\), the number of \(\left|P\right\rangle\)-populated atoms \({N}_{\mathrm{a}}\left(t\right)={\sum }_{u=1}^{N}\mathrm{Tr}\left[\rho \left(t\right){\sigma }_{u}^{\dagger}{\sigma }_{u}\right]\), and the interatomic correlation \({C}_{\mathrm{a}}\left(t\right)=\frac{1}{N\left(N-1\right)}\left|{\sum }_{\mu \ne \nu }\mathrm{Tr}\left[\rho \left(t\right){\sigma }_{u}^{\dagger}{\sigma }_{\nu }\right]\right|\).
The results have been presented in Fig. 3. It is seen that \({N}_{\mathrm{p},\mathrm{C}\mathrm{W}}\left(t\right)={N}_{\mathrm{p},\mathrm{C}\mathrm{C}\mathrm{W}}\left(t\right)={C}_{\mathrm{p}}\left(t\right)\), i.e., the atoms contribute equally to two degenerate lasing WGMs and the intermode correlation is as strong as the field intensity of individual modes. In the fast-cavity regime (e.g., \(Q={10}^{7}\) with \(\kappa \gg g\gg \gamma \)), the photons emitted by atoms rapidly escape from the microcavity well before being reabsorbed by atoms. Consequently, \({N}_{\mathrm{a}}\left(t\right)\) degrades monotonically with a decay constant (defined by the reciprocal of a time length after \({N}_{\mathrm{a}}\left(t\right)\) falls to 1/e of its initial value) of about 2Fγ. The extra factor 2 comes from the fact that atoms interact with two lasing WGMs. For the one-atom system (see Fig. 3a with N = 1), the decay behavior of \({N}_{\mathrm{a}}\left(t\right)\) well matches the ideal exponential decay \(\mathrm{exp}\left(-2F\gamma t\right)\), i.e., Lorentzian broadening. As the atom number N is increased, the decay of \({N}_{\mathrm{a}}\left(t\right)\) is apparently accelerated (see Fig. 3a with N = 5). This is because the exchange of intracavity photons among different atoms gives rise to the nonzero interatomic correlation \({C}_{\mathrm{a}}\left(t\right)\), leading to the partially constructive interference of multiple emitters, i.e., superradiance. For a slow microcavity (e.g., \(Q={10}^{8}\) with \(\kappa \sim g\gg \gamma \)), both \({N}_{\mathrm{p},i=\mathrm{C}\mathrm{W},\mathrm{C}\mathrm{C}\mathrm{W}}\left(t\right)\) and \({N}_{\mathrm{a}}\left(t\right)\) exhibit an oscillatory behavior (Fig. 3b), i.e., the Purcell picture breaks down, since the atoms can reabsorb intracavity photons before the photons escape from the microcavity. The envelope of \({N}_{\mathrm{a}}\left(t\right)\) follows the exponential decay with a decay constant given by the half of the microcavity loss rate \(\kappa /2\). Moreover, we exam the efficiency of the microcavity collecting the fluorescence of atoms \(\eta ={\sum }_{i=\mathrm{C}\mathrm{W},\mathrm{C}\mathrm{C}\mathrm{W}}\int {N}_{\mathrm{p},i}\left(t\right)dt/N\) and find that for both fast and slow microcavities, η reaches almost unity because of \(g\gg \gamma \). Such a high collection efficiency is of particularly useful for the applications in optical quantum information processing51.
We further assume that the atoms are repeatedly prepared in \(\left| P \right\rangle\) with a period T and perform the Hanbury Brown–Twiss measurement on the photon emission, i.e., the coincidence counts as a function of the time delay τ between two successive photon detection events52. The duration T is long enough (i.e., FγT ≫ 1 for the fast microcavity while κT ≫ 1 for the slow microcavity) that the atoms decay sufficiently at the end of each period. For the one-atom system with N = 1, the self-coincidence statistics of individual WGM outputs is almost zero at \(\tau =0\) (Fig. 3c,d). In other words, the system cannot emit more than one CW or CCW photon simultaneously. Such a purely nonclassical behavior is expectable since the system is initialized with only one energy quantum within each period T. Also, the cross-coincidence statistics between two WGMs reaches zero at the zero-time delay \(\tau =0\). That is, the system cannot emit a pair of CW and CCW photons at the same time, which, however, is not a nonclassical property53. The one-atom operation may be of particular use for an efficient single-photon emitter. For the system with N > 1, either self-coincidence or cross-coincidence statistics presents a peak at the zero-time delay \(\tau =0\), denoting that two lasing WGMs emit bunched photons.
Microlaser
The atom-microcavity coupled system can operate as a three-level microlaser. The pump process is implemented by using a pair of laser beams to resonantly drive the two-photon \(\left| S \right\rangle\)–(5s5p)3P1 (m = − 1)–(5s6s)3S1 transition (Fig. 1b). Several repump beams are applied to excite the atoms in (5s5p)3P0, (5s5p)3P1 (m = 1) and (5s5p)3P2 to (5s6s)3S1. The atoms accumulate in \(\left| P \right\rangle\) via the rapid spontaneous decay from (5s6s)3S1 to \(\left| P \right\rangle\). To mathematically describe the pump process, an extra term44.
with an effective pumping rate Γ should be added into the master Eq. (26). Actually, \({\mathcal{D}}_{\mathrm{p}\mathrm{u}\mathrm{m}\mathrm{p}}\left(\rho \right)\) is identical to \({\mathcal{D}}_{\mathrm{s}\mathrm{p}}\left(\rho \right)\) with the replacements \(\gamma \to \mathrm{\Gamma }\), \({\sigma }_{u}\to {\sigma }_{u}^{\dagger}\), and \({\sigma }_{u}^{\dagger}\to {\sigma }_{u}\). Again, the MCWF method is applied to solve the lasing dynamics.
We focus on the steady-state (denoted by the subscript s) solutions, i.e., \(\rho \left(t\to \infty \right)\). Due to the degeneracy of two lasing WGMs, these two WGMs have the same intracavity photon number, \({N}_{\mathrm{p},\mathrm{s}}=\mathrm{Tr}\left[{a}_{i=\mathrm{C}\mathrm{W},\mathrm{C}\mathrm{C}\mathrm{W}}^{\dagger}{a}_{i}\rho \left(t\to \infty \right)\right]\). For the one-atom microlaser with N = 1, Np,s grows as Γ is increased (see Fig. 4a). However, Γ cannot be arbitrarily high since the spontaneous decay rate of 88Sr from (5s6s)3S1 to \(\left| P \right\rangle\) sets the upper limit to Γ, i.e., \({\mathrm{\Gamma }}_{\text{max}}=2.5\times {10}^{7}\) s−1. Within the regime of Γ ≤ Γmax, Np,s is well below unity. Enhancing Np,s requires a larger \(Q\) of microsphere, which is primarily restricted by the radiation loss (due to the small radius of microsphere). The laser fields are featured by their high temporal coherence that is characterized by the first-order correlation function, \({g}^{\left(1\right)}\left(\tau \right)=\langle{a}_{i=\mathrm{C}\mathrm{W},\mathrm{C}\mathrm{C}\mathrm{W}}^{\dagger}\left(t+\tau \right){a}_{i}\left(t\right)\rangle\) with a time delay τ. Here, O(t) denotes the operator O in the Heisenberg picture. The MCWF method is also applicable to simulate the two-time correlation function. It is seen from Fig. 4a that \({g}^{\left(1\right)}\left(\tau \right)\) monotonically degrades with τ for a low-\(Q\) (e.g., ~ 107) microcavity while \({g}^{\left(1\right)}\left(\tau \right)\) exhibits a damped oscillation behavior for a large \(Q\) (e.g., ~ 108).
We then map \({g}^{\left(1\right)}\left(\tau \right)\) onto the laser spectrum \(S\left(\omega \right)\) via the Fourier transform, \(S\left(\omega \right)=\int {g}^{\left(1\right)}\left(\tau \right){e}^{-i\omega \tau }d\tau \). For the low-\(Q\) microcavity, \(S\left(\omega \right)\) is single peaked (Fig. 4a) and the spectral linewidth (defined by the full width at half maximum) is much narrower than the WGM linewidth κ, indicating that highly coherent intracavity fields are established. By contrast, two spectral peaks are presented in \(S\left(\omega \right)\) for the high-\(Q\) microcavity (Fig. 4a), which is indeed ascribed to the vacuum Rabi splitting (i.e., the dressed-state picture) of the laser transition in the strong atom-microcavity coupling limit54. Remarkably, the linewidth of each spectral peak is close to the WGM linewidth κ, i.e., the temporal coherence of laser fields approaches that of cavity modes. We attribute this to the cavity pulling effect caused by the vacuum Rabi splitting. The high intensity (photon-number) fluctuations of intracavity fields lead to a strong spectral broadening. It should be noted that such a doublet vanishes for a high enough Γ because the dressed states with higher photon numbers are occupied54. Moreover, we perform the MCWF simulation on the second-order correlation function \({g}^{\left(2\right)}\left(\tau \right)=\langle{a}_{i=\mathrm{C}\mathrm{W},\mathrm{C}\mathrm{C}\mathrm{W}}^{\dagger}\left(t\right){a}_{i}^{\dagger}\left(t+\tau \right){a}_{i}\left(t+\tau \right){a}_{i}\left(t\right)\rangle\) and find that the outputs of the one-atom microlaser show the antibunching behavior, i.e., \({g}^{\left(2\right)}\left(0\right)<1\). A low-\(Q\) microcavity highlights such an effect.
The pump and repump beams inevitably induce the extra light shift of the laser transition. This may reduce the overlap between the motional states of the atom in \(\left| S \right\rangle\) and \(\left| P \right\rangle\), thereby suppressing the coupling strength \(g\). Achieving the maximum pump rate Γmax demands a deep saturation of the \(\left| S \right\rangle\)–(5s5p)3P1 (m = − 1) transition, which results in a light shift of the \(\left| S \right\rangle\)–\(\left| P \right\rangle\) transition much exceeding its natural linewidth γ. Thus, the pump rate Γ is further restricted by the pump-beam-induced light shift. We set the strength of the magnetic field B to be 1 Gs, leading to a Zeeman shift of (5s5p)3P1 (m = − 1) of \(2\mathrm{\pi }\times 2.1\) MHz. It is estimated that Γ can be as high as 30γ without introducing a light shift larger than γ to the laser transition.
We further investigate the multiple-atom lasing action with a high-\(Q\) microcavity and, for the sake of comparison, the pump rate Γ is set at Γmax and 30γ. As illustrated in Fig. 4b, increasing the atom number N (up to N = 7) approximately linearly raises the photon number Np,s, i.e., \({N}_{\mathrm{p},\mathrm{s}}\approx kN\), and the factor of proportionality k depends on Γ. The histogram of the distribution of intracavity photon number (Fig. 4c) indicates that for Γ = Γmax the maximum of the photon number moves away from zero and the width of the distribution expands as N goes up. By contrast, for Γ = 30γ the distribution depends less on N. We also numerically calculate the spectra of multiple-atom lasers and find that the double-peaked spectrum disappears when N ≥ 2. This is because multiple transitions between various dressed states contribute the intracavity fields. The linewidth of the laser spectrum does not show an apparent change as N is increased.
Interestingly, as plotted in Fig. 4d, the normalized \(\left| P \right\rangle\)-population of atoms \({N}_{\mathrm{a},\mathrm{s}}/N\) does not exceed one half for Γ = 30γ. That is to say, the population inversion is not a necessary condition for the lasing action, i.e., thresholdless. However, such a lasing without inversion is unlike that of55,56 since the latter originate from the quantum interference between multiple atomic transitions. Indeed, the laser dynamics here is an enhanced emission of photons under the strong atom-microcavity coupling condition. In addition, the steady-state interatomic correlation \({C}_{\mathrm{a},\mathrm{s}}\) strongly degrades as the system’s size grows (Fig. 4e). This behavior coincides with the mean-field conclusion derived in44. One may expect \({C}_{\mathrm{a},\mathrm{s}}\approx 0\) for a macroscopic-sized system with \(N\to \infty \), where the common mean-field theory is applicable. Surprisingly, Γ = 30γ gives a higher \({C}_{\mathrm{a},\mathrm{s}}\) than Γ = Γmax. That is, the less intracavity photon number enhances the interatomic correlation, although the latter arises from exchanging photons between atoms. For N = 1, the zero-time-delay \({g}^{\left(2\right)}\left(0\right)\) with Γ = 30γ is lower than that of Γ = Γmax (Fig. 4f) because a photon emission event occurs well behind the previous event for a small Γ. When N > 1, the laser outputs the bunched photons and the photon-number fluctuations with Γ = 30γ are higher than that of Γ = Γmax.
Discussion
We have studied an atom-microcavity platform, where a small number of neutral 88Sr atoms are confined in a ring-shaped lattice potential and strongly interact with a microsphere. The optical lattice is formed by combining the evanescent fields of two-color far-off-resonance WGMs. The red-detuned standing-wave WGM operates at a magic wavelength while the blue-detuned WGM wavelength is close to the other magic wavelength. Consequently, the lattice-induced light shift of the intercombination line of 88Sr is negligible compared to its natural linewidth γ. The resultant lattice potential can reach over 30 µK, deep enough for trapping ultracold atoms, and the trapping lifetime exceeds 103 s, long enough for the continuous lasing action. The tiny mode volume and high quality factor of the microsphere ensure the system accessing the strong coupling regime. We exploit the function of the combined system as a microscale light source. The output vs. pump shows a thresholdless behavior, a direct result from the strong atom-microcavity coupling. The one-atom microlaser outputs the nonclassical light, potentially applicable in optical quantum information processing. The output fields become classical for the multi-atom operation.
Thus far, various laser schemes based on the forbidden 1S0–3P0 clock transition of alkaline-earth metal atoms have been proposed, such as optical lattice lasers44 and superradiant lasers57. Typically, the spectral linewidth of the gain medium is of the order of millihertz, extremely narrower than that of the cavity mode. According to the analysis in58, such bad-cavity lasers potentially work as active optical clocks that are immune to the influence of the thermal Brownian motion of mechanical cavities. The optical cavities used in these schemes are all in Fabry–Pérot structure, whose mode volume Veff is artificially squeezed so as to strengthen the atom-cavity interaction. Nevertheless, Veff is of the order of 10−12 m3. By contrast, WGM microcavities make use of the total internal reflection and possess \({V}_{\text{eff}}\) \(\sim {10}^{-16}\) m3, leading to a two-orders-of-magnitude-enhanced coupling between atoms and microcavity. Although in this work we studied the lasing action based on the atomic intercombination transition (due to the limitation of computation time), the relevant analysis may be generalized to the (5s2)1S0–(5s5p)3P0 clock transition of neutral (fermionic) 87Sr. The hyperfine structure of 87Sr should be taken into account to find a WGM at, for example, the red-detuned magic wavelength59 under the condition that the other WGM is resonant to the clock transition. However, it is challenging to search for a third WGM, which operates at or close to a blue-detuned magic wavelength so that the induced light shift of the clock transition can be suppressed down to millihertz level.
Our platform with lattice-confined ultracold atoms also provides for various potential applications in many-body physics and quantum simulation and computation. The motion of atoms in a ring-shaped lattice matches strictly a one-dimensional many-body system with a periodic boundary condition that has been widely studied in literature. By contrast, the optical lattice formed by the standing wave of a retro-reflected laser beam actually has an open boundary. The ring-shaped lattice may be twisted by introducing an external magnetic field, in which the atoms with nonzero magnetic dipoles experience extra phases. This phase twist cannot be gauged away, leading to persistent currents60. Thus, the platform can be used to simulate solid-state Josephson flux qubits61, which code the quantum information in the superposition of CW and CCW persistent currents. In addition, attaching the ring-shaped lattice with two leads (source and drain) allows one to study the topological transport62.
Methods
Magic wavelengths
The general method of calculating the ac polarizability of an atom has been summarized in37. The 88Sr atoms have zero nuclear spin. In the electric dipole (E1) approximation, the ac polarizability of 88Sr in \(\left| S \right\rangle\) takes the form.
where λ is the wavelength of an external π-polarization light field, ωµ is the frequency of the E1 transition between the fine-structure upper |µ⟩ and lower \(\left| S \right\rangle\) states, and Aµ denotes the corresponding Einstein coefficient. The |µ⟩ state can be (nsn'p)1P1 and (5s5p)3P1. It is seen that \({\alpha }_{\mathrm{S}}\left(\lambda \right)\) is independent of the direction of quantum axis θB. By contrast, the ac polarizability of 88Sr in \(\left| P \right\rangle\) depends on θB and is derived as
where, for example, the value of Kronecker delta \({\delta }_{{J}_{\mu },2}\) is 1 (0) when the total angular moment Jµ of the |µ⟩ state is (not) equal to 2. Similarly, \({\delta }_{\left|\mu \right\rangle,\left|\mathrm{S}\right\rangle}=1\) (0) when |µ⟩ is (not) \(\left| S \right\rangle\). The data of ωµ and Aµ of the associated E1 transitions has been listed in38.
Figure 5 illustrates that the difference between \({\alpha }_{\mathrm{S}}\) and \({\alpha }_{\mathrm{P}}\) is cancelled, i.e., \({\alpha }_{\mathrm{r}}\equiv {\alpha }_{\mathrm{S}}\left({\lambda }_{\mathrm{r}}\right)={\alpha }_{\mathrm{P}}\left({\lambda }_{\mathrm{r}}\right)=0.27\) a.u., at \({\lambda }_{\mathrm{r}}=832.69\) nm with \({\theta }_{\text{B}}=55.45^\circ \). The magic wavelength λr is red-detuned to the intercombination transition of 88Sr and matches the \(\left({n}_{\mathrm{r}}=1,{l}_{\mathrm{r}}=49,\pm {m}_{\mathrm{r}}\right)\) WGMs with \({m}_{\mathrm{r}}=47\). Generally, it is challenging to find the other magic wavelength that is blue-detuned and also coincides with a WGM of microsphere. Nevertheless, the wavelength of the blue-detuned trapping beam can be chosen as \({\lambda }_{\mathrm{b}}=392.58\) nm, which is resonant to the fundamental \(\left({n}_{\mathrm{b}}=1,{l}_{\mathrm{b}}=109,{m}_{\mathrm{b}}=109\right)\) WGM and is close to the other blue-detuned magic wavelength at 392.44 nm. At λb, we have \({\alpha }_{\mathrm{S}}\left({\lambda }_{\mathrm{b}},{\theta }_{\text{B}}\right)=-0.48\) a.u. and \({\alpha }_{\mathrm{P}}\left({\lambda }_{\mathrm{b}},{\theta }_{\text{B}}\right)=-0.49\) a.u. (Fig. 5). Since the relative difference \(\left({\alpha }_{\mathrm{S}}-{\alpha }_{\mathrm{P}}\right)/{\alpha }_{\mathrm{S},\mathrm{P}}\) is about \(-2.1\times {10}^{-2}\), one may approximate \({\alpha }_{\mathrm{b}}\equiv {\alpha }_{\mathrm{S}}\left({\lambda }_{\mathrm{b}},{\theta }_{\text{B}}\right)\approx {\alpha }_{\mathrm{P}}\left({\lambda }_{\mathrm{b}},{\theta }_{\text{B}}\right)\) at λb.
The atoms scattering the photons of the trapping beams heats the temperature of atoms. The lifetime of confined atoms in \(\left| S \right\rangle\) is determined by the reciprocal of the photon scattering rate.
where \({I}_{i}\) denotes the red/blue-detuned light intensity at the location of the atom, \({\omega }_{i}=2\mathrm{\pi }c/{\lambda }_{i}\) is the trapping beam frequency, and \({I}_{\mathrm{s}\mathrm{a}\mathrm{t},\mu }=\left(2\mathrm{\pi }hc/3{\lambda }_{\mu }^{3}\right){A}_{\mu }\) gives the saturation intensity corresponding to the |µ⟩ – \(\left| S \right\rangle\) transition with \({\lambda }_{\mu }=2\mathrm{\pi }c/{\omega }_{\mu }\). We set the light powers of the red-detuned and blue-detuned trapping beams in the \(y-z\) plane at 27 and 87 mW, respectively. The atoms are confined at a location with a distance of \(\left({\rho }_{0}-R\right)=137\) nm to the microsphere’s surface. The resulting γp is ~ 10−3 s−1 and the trapping lifetime is estimated to be 103 s. By contrast, the lifetime of the confined atoms in \(\left| P \right\rangle\) is primarily determined by the intrinsic decay rate γ of the intercombination transition.
Vibrational states of an atom in a lattice site
In spherical coordinates \(\left(\rho >R,\theta ,\varphi \right)\), the blue- and red-detuned optical potentials have the approximate expressions.
with \({z}_{{l}_{u=\mathrm{b},\mathrm{r}}}\left(\rho \right)={\xi }_{{l}_{u}}\left({k}_{u}\rho \right)/{k}_{u}\rho \). Adding van der Waals potential, the total lattice potential is expressed as \({U}_{\mathrm{t}\mathrm{o}\mathrm{t}}\left(\mathbf{r}\right)={U}_{\mathrm{b}}\left(\mathbf{r}\right)+{U}_{\mathrm{r}}\left(\mathbf{r}\right)-{C}_{3}/{\left(\rho -R\right)}^{3}\). We assume that the lattice potential is deep enough that the atoms are tightly confined within the central region of each lattice site. Let us focus on the lattice site located at \(\left({\rho }_{0},\theta =\mathrm{\pi }/2,\varphi =0\right)\). Writing \(\theta =\mathrm{\pi }/2+\delta \theta /\sqrt{{l}_{\mathrm{b}}}\) and \(\varphi =\delta \varphi /{m}_{\mathrm{r}}\) with small angles \(\delta \theta \) and \(\delta \varphi \), one has the approximations \({\mathrm{\Theta }}_{{l}_{\mathrm{b}},{l}_{\mathrm{b}}}^{2}\left(\theta \right)\approx \sqrt{{l}_{\mathrm{b}}/\pi }\left[1-{\left(\delta \theta \right)}^{2}\right]\), \({\mathrm{cos}}^{2}{m}_{\mathrm{r}}\varphi \approx \left[1-{\left(\delta \varphi \right)}^{2}\right]\), and \({\mathrm{\Theta }}_{{l}_{\mathrm{r}},{m}_{\mathrm{r}}}^{2}\left(\theta \right)\approx \sqrt{{m}_{\mathrm{r}}/64\pi }\left[1-\left(3{m}_{\mathrm{r}}/{l}_{\mathrm{b}}\right){\left(\delta \theta \right)}^{2}\right]\). Thus, \({U}_{\mathrm{t}\mathrm{o}\mathrm{t}}\left(\mathbf{r}\right)\) is rewritten as
The Hamiltonian for an atom (mass M) moving in \({U}_{\mathrm{t}\mathrm{o}\mathrm{t}}\left(\mathbf{r}\right)\) takes the form.
Using \(\frac{1}{\mathrm{sin}\theta }\frac{\partial }{\partial \theta }\mathrm{sin}\theta \frac{\partial }{\partial \theta }\sim {l}_{\mathrm{b}}\frac{{\partial }^{2}}{\partial {\left(\delta \theta \right)}^{2}}\) and \(\frac{1}{{\mathrm{sin}}^{2}\theta }\sim 1\), H is approximately re-expressed as
where we have defined three potential components.
Following the approach of separation of variables, the Schrödinger equation \(H\mathrm{\Psi }\left(\text{r}\right)=E\mathrm{\Psi }\left(\text{r}\right)\) leads to.
with the egeinfunction \(\mathrm{\Psi }\left(\rho ,\theta ,\varphi \right)={\psi }_{\rho }\left(\rho \right){\psi }_{\theta }\left(\delta \theta \right){\psi }_{\varphi }\left(\delta \varphi \right)\) and the eigenvalue \(E={E}_{\rho }+{E}_{\theta }+{E}_{\varphi }\). The radial wavefunction \({\psi }_{\rho }\left(\rho \right)\) can be solved in a numerical way. We consider \({U}_{\mathrm{t}\mathrm{o}\mathrm{t}}\left(\mathbf{r}\right)\) shown in Fig. 2b. Figure 6 depicts the distributions \({\left|{\psi }_{\rho }\left(\rho \right)\right|}^{2}\) of the first few eigenstates with a nearly equal energy separation of \({\mathrm{\Omega }}_{\rho }=2\mathrm{\pi }\times 86\) kHz. By contrast, the atom acts as a quantum harmonic oscillator along either \(\theta \)- or \(\varphi \)-direction with the corresponding oscillation frequencies \({\mathrm{\Omega }}_{\theta }=2\mathrm{\pi }\times 25\) kHz and \({\mathrm{\Omega }}_{\varphi }=2\mathrm{\pi }\times 145\) kHz, respectively.
Data availability
All data supporting the findings of this study are available from the corresponding author upon reasonable request.
Code availability
The computer code to simulate the dynamics are available from the corresponding author upon reasonable request.
References
Zhuang, W., Yu, D., Liu, Z. & Chen, J. Multi-threshold second-order phase transition in laser. Chi. Sci. Bull. 56, 3812–3816 (2011).
De Martini, F., Cairo, F., Mataloni, P. & Verzegnassi, F. Thresholdless microlaser. Phys. Rev. A 46, 4220–4233 (1992).
McKeever, J., Boca, A., Boozer, A. D., Buck, J. R. & Kimble, H. J. Experimental realization of a one-atom laser in the regime of strong coupling. Nature 425, 268–271 (2003).
Zhou, Z., Yin, B. & Michel, J. On-chip light sources for silicon photonics. Light Sci. Appl. 4, e358 (2015).
Oulton, R. F. et al. Plasmon lasers at deep subwavelength scale. Nature 461, 629–632 (2009).
Kok, P. et al. Linear optical quantum computing with photonic qubits. Rev. Mod. Phys. 79, 135–174 (2007).
Li, B.-B. et al. Single nanoparticle detection using split-mode microcavity Raman lasers. PNAS 111, 14657–14662 (2014).
Toropov, N. et al. Review of biosensing with whispering-gallery mode lasers. Light Sci. Appl. 10, 42 (2021).
Miao, P. et al. Orbital angular momentum microlaser. Science 353, 464–467 (2016).
Kimble, H. J. Strong interactions of single atoms and photons in cavity QED. Phys. Scr. T76, 127–137 (1998).
Takahashi, H., Kassa, E., Christoforou, C. & Keller, M. Strong coupling of a single ion to an optical cavity. Phys. Rev. Lett. 124, 013602 (2020).
Wang, D. et al. Turning a molecule into a coherent two-level quantum system. Nat. Phys. 15, 483–489 (2019).
Nomura, M., Kumagai, N., Iwamoto, S., Ota, Y. & Arakawa, Y. Laser oscillation in a strongly coupled single-quantum-dot-nanocavity system. Nat. Phys. 6, 279–283 (2010).
Wallraff, A. et al. Strong coupling of a single photon to a superconducting qubit using circuit quantum electrodynamics. Nature 431, 162–167 (2004).
Chikkaraddy, R. et al. Single-molecule strong coupling at room temperature in plasmonic nanocavities. Nature 535, 127–130 (2016).
Gorodetsky, M. L., Savchenkov, A. A. & Ilchenko, V. S. Ultimate Q of optical microsphere resonators. Opt. Lett. 21, 453–455 (1996).
Vernooy, D. W., Ilchenko, V. S., Mabuchi, H., Streed, E. W. & Kimble, H. J. High-Q measurements of fused-silica microspheres in the near infrared. Opt. Lett. 23, 247–249 (1998).
Balac, S. WGMode: A Matlab toolbox for whispering gallery modes volume computation in spherical optical micro-resonators. Comput. Phys. Commun. 243, 121–134 (2019).
Buck, J. R. & Kimble, H. J. Optimal sizes of dielectric microspheres for cavity QED with strong coupling. Phys. Rev. A 67, 033806 (2003).
Spillane, S. M. et al. Ultrahigh- toroidal microresonators for cavity quantum electrodynamics. Phys. Rev. A 71, 013817 (2005).
Aoki, T. et al. Observation of strong coupling between one atom and a monolithic microresonator. Nature 443, 671–674 (2006).
Alton, D. J. et al. Strong interactions of single atoms and photons near a dielectric boundary. Nat. Phys. 7, 159–165 (2011).
Bohnet, J. G., Chen, Z., Weiner, J. M., Cox, K. C. & Thompson, J. K. Active and passive sensing of collective atomic coherence in a superradiant laser. Phys. Rev. A 88, 013826 (2013).
Norcia, M. A., Winchester, M. N., Cline, J. R. K. & Thompson, J. K. Superradiance on the millihertz linewidth strontium clock transition. Sci. Adv. 2, e1601231 (2016).
Yoon, S. et al. Definitive number of atoms on demand: Controlling the number of atoms in a few-atom magneto-optical trap. Appl. Phys. Lett. 88, 211104 (2006).
Ido, T. & Katori, H. Recoil-free spectroscopy of neutral Sr atoms in the Lamb-Dicke regime. Phys. Rev. Lett. 91, 053001 (2003).
Katori, H., Takamoto, M., Pal’chikov, V. G. & Ovsiannikov, V. D. Ultrastable optical clock with neutral atoms in an engineered light shift trap. Phys. Rev. Lett. 91, 173005 (2003).
Mabuchi, H. & Kimble, H. J. Atom galleries for whispering atoms: binding atoms in stable orbits around an optical resonator. Opt. Lett. 19, 749–751 (1994).
Vernooy, D. W. & Kimble, H. J. Quantum structure and dynamics for atom galleries. Phys. Rev. A 55, 1239–1261 (1997).
Rosenblit, M., Japha, Y., Horak, P. & Folman, R. Simultaneous optical trapping and detection of atoms by microdisk resonators. Phys. Rev. A 73, 063805 (2006).
Kien, F. L., Balykin, V. I. & Hakuta, K. Atom trap and waveguide using a two-color evanescent light field around a subwavelength-diameter optical fiber. Phys. Rev. A 70, 063403 (2004).
Vetsch, E. et al. Optical interface created by laser-cooled atoms trapped in the evanescent field surrounding an optical nanofiber. Phys. Rev. Lett. 104, 203603 (2010).
Lacroûte, C. et al. A state-insensitive, compensated nanofiber trap. New J. Phys. 14, 023056 (2012).
Goban, A. et al. Demonstration of a state-insensitive, compensated nanofiber trap. Phys. Rev. Lett. 109, 033603 (2012).
Lam, C. C., Leung, P. T. & Young, K. Explicit asymptotic formulas for the positions, widths, and strengths of resonances in Mie scattering. J. Opt. Soc. Am. B 9, 1585–1592 (1992).
Vollmer, F. & Yu, D. Optical Whispering Gallery Modes for Biosensing: From Physical Principles to Applications 132–134 (Springer International Publishing, 2020).
Rosenbusch, P. et al. ac Stark shift of the Cs microwave atomic clock transitions. Phys. Rev. A 79, 013404 (2009).
Zhou, X., Xu, X., Chen, X. & Chen, J. Magic wavelengths for terahertz clock transitions. Phys. Rev. A 81, 012115 (2010).
Takamoto, M., Katori, H., Marmo, S. I., Ovsiannikov, V. D. & Palchikov, V. G. Prospects for optical clocks with a blue-detuned lattice. Phys. Rev. Lett. 102, 063002 (2009).
Katori, H., Ido, T., Isoya, Y. & Kuwata-Gonokami, M. Magneto-optical trapping and cooling of strontium atoms down to the photon recoil temperature. Phys. Rev. Lett. 82, 1116–1119 (1999).
Savchenkov, A. A., Matsko, A. B., Ilchenko, V. S., Strekalov, D. & Maleki, L. Direct observation of stopped light in a whispering-gallery-mode microresonator. Phys. Rev. A 76, 023816 (2007).
Carmon, T. et al. Static envelope patterns in composite resonances generated by level crossing in optical toroidal microcavities. Phys. Rev. Lett. 100, 103905 (2008).
Attar, S. T., Shuvayev, V., Deych, L., Martin, L. L. & Carmon, T. Level-crossing and modal structure in microdroplet resonators. Opt. Express 24, 13134–13141 (2016).
Meiser, D., Ye, J., Carlson, D. R. & Holland, M. J. Prospects for a millihertz-linewidth laser. Phys. Rev. Lett. 102, 163601 (2009).
Spillane, S. M. Fiber-coupled ultra-high- microresonators for nonlinear and quantum optics. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology (2004).
Blanc, W. & Dussardier, B. Formation and applications of nanoparticles in silica optical fibers. J. Opt. 45, 247–254 (2016).
Hale, G. M. & Querry, M. R. Optical constants of water in the 200-nm to 200-m wavelength region. Appl. Opt. 12, 555–563 (1973).
Yu, D. Two coupled one-atom lasers. J. Opt. Soc. Am. B 33, 797–803 (2016).
Mølmer, K., Castin, Y. & Dalibard, J. Monte Carlo wave-function method in quantum optics. J. Opt. Soc. Am. B 10, 524–538 (1993).
Purcell, E. M., Torrey, H. C. & Pound, R. V. Resonance absorption by nuclear magnetic moments in a solid. Phys. Rev. 69, 37–38 (1946).
Hadfield, R. H. Single-photon detectors for optical quantum information applications. Nat. Photon. 3, 696–705 (2009).
Hanbury Brown, R. & Twiss, R. Q. Correlation between photons in two coherent beams of light. Nature 177, 27–29 (1956).
Macovei, M., Evers, J. & Keitel, C. H. Quantum correlations of an atomic ensemble via an incoherent bath. Phys. Rev. A 72, 063809 (2005).
Löffler, M., Meyer, G. M. & Walther, H. Spectral properties of the one-atom laser. Phys. Rev. A 55, 3923–3930 (1997).
Harris, S. E. Lasers without inversion: Interference of lifetime-broadened resonances. Phys. Rev. Lett. 62, 1033–1036 (1989).
Zibrov, A. S. et al. Experimental demonstration of laser oscillation without population inversion via quantum interference in Rb. Phys. Rev. Lett. 75, 1499–1052 (1995).
Maier, T., Kraemer, S., Ostermann, L. & Ritsch, H. A. Superradiant clock laser on a magic wavelength optical lattice. Opt. Express 22, 13269–13279 (2014).
Chen, J. Active optical clock. Chin. Sci. Bull. 54, 348–352 (2009).
Campbell, S. L. et al. A Fermi-degenerate three-dimensional optical lattice clock. Science 358, 90–94 (2017).
Amico, L., Osterloh, A. & Cataliotti, F. Quantum many particle systems in ring-shaped optical lattices. Phys. Rev. Lett. 95, 063201 (2005).
Amico, L. et al. Superfluid qubit systems with ring shaped optical lattices. Sci. Rep. 4, 4298 (2014).
Haug, T., Dumke, R., Kwek, L.-C. & Amico, L. Topological pumping in Aharonov-Bohm rings. Commun. Phys. 2, 127 (2019).
Acknowledgements
This work is supported by Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) Grant No. EP/R031428/1 (UK).
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Contributions
D.Y. developed all theoretical models, made the calculations and plotted the figures. D.Y. and F.V. participated in the scientific discussion and wrote the paper.
Corresponding author
Ethics declarations
Competing interests
The authors declare no competing interests.
Additional information
Publisher's note
Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.
Rights and permissions
Open Access This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons licence, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article's Creative Commons licence, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article's Creative Commons licence and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this licence, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.
About this article
Cite this article
Yu, D., Vollmer, F. Microscale whispering-gallery-mode light sources with lattice-confined atoms. Sci Rep 11, 13899 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-93295-5
Received:
Accepted:
Published:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-93295-5
- Springer Nature Limited
This article is cited by
-
Active optomechanics
Communications Physics (2022)
-
Whispering-gallery-mode sensors for biological and physical sensing
Nature Reviews Methods Primers (2021)