Publications by authors named "Klaas Bergmann"

Recent work demonstrated stimulated Raman adiabatic passage-type transfer of energy along 3 acoustic cavities. After brief comments on the stimulated Raman adiabatic passage method, remarks on the scientific and technological relevance of this work are presented, followed by noting other recent important applications of the process.

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The first presentation of the STIRAP (stimulated Raman adiabatic passage) technique with proper theoretical foundation and convincing experimental data appeared 25 years ago, in the May 1st, 1990 issue of The Journal of Chemical Physics. By now, the STIRAP concept has been successfully applied in many different fields of physics, chemistry, and beyond. In this article, we comment briefly on the initial motivation of the work, namely, the study of reaction dynamics of vibrationally excited small molecules, and how this initial idea led to the documented success.

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We study a method for controlling the flow of excitation through decaying levels in a three-level ladder excitation scheme in Na(2) molecules. Like the stimulated Raman adiabatic passage (STIRAP), this method is based on the control of the evolution of adiabatic states by a suitable delayed interaction of the molecules with two radiation fields. However, unlike STIRAP, which transfers a population between two stable levels g and f via a decaying intermediate level e through the interaction of partially overlapping pulses (usually in a Lambda linkage), here the final level f is not long lived.

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A technique for adiabatic control of the population flow through a preselected decaying excited level in a three-level quantum ladder is presented. The population flow through the intermediate or upper level is controlled efficiently and robustly by varying the pulse delay between a pair of partly overlapping coherent laser pulses. The technique is analyzed theoretically and demonstrated in an experiment with Na2 molecules.

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We present a technique to correct interferometry for the material-dependent phase shift that accompanies reflection. Such corrections are needed for nanometer accuracy of surfaces that are not of homogeneous composition. We adapt the general theory of reflection from surfaces in which there are irregular and unresolved areas of several materials to treat the specific case in which only two materials are present, as is the case for many practical applications.

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We demonstrate experimental techniques for creating and measuring a coherent superposition of two degenerate atomic states with equal amplitudes in metastable neon. Starting from state (3)P(0), we create adiabatically a coherent superposition of the magnetic sublevels M=+/-1 of the state (3)P(2) using a tripod stimulated Raman adiabatic passage scheme. The measurement is based on the coupling of the levels (3)P(2)<-->(3)P(1) by a linearly polarized laser, followed by the detection of the population in the (3)P(2)(M=+/-2) states as a function of the polarization angle of that laser.

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