In order to achieve the tunable unidirectional reflection amplification in a uniform atomic medium that is of vital importance to design high-quality nonreciprocal photonic devices, we propose a coherent closed three-level Δ-type atomic system by applying a microwave field, and a strong coupling field of linear variation along the x direction to control a probe field. In our scheme, the linearly increased coupling field destroys the spatial symmetry of probe susceptibility and effectively suppresses the reflection of one side; the microwave field constructs closed loop transitions to amplify the probe field and causes phase changes. The numerical simulation indicates that the unidirectional reflection amplification is sensitive to the relative phase ϕ and the coupling detuning Δ.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFControl of unidirectional light propagation is of paramount importantance to optical signal processing and optical communication. Especially, the amplified optical signal can isolate noise well that may provide more applications. In this work, we propose a dynamically modulated regime to realize unidirectional reflection amplification in a short and dense uniform atomic medium, and all atoms are driven into four-level double-Λ type by two coupling fields with linearly varied intensities along x direction and two weak probe fields.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNon-reciprocal reflections of optical signals are unusual yet fascinating to achieve the imminent applications of non-reciprocal photonic devices and circuits. The complete non-reciprocal reflection (unidirectional reflection) was recently found to be achievable in a homogeneous medium, if the real and imaginary parts of the probe susceptibility satisfy the spatial Kramers-Kronig (KK) relation. We propose a coherent four-level tripod model for realizing dynamically tunable two-color non-reciprocal reflections by applying two control fields with linearly modulated intensities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInvestigating and controlling light propagation in one-dimensional (1D) ordered and disordered atomic lattices is critical both fundamentally and for applications. In this study, cold atoms are trapped in 1D optical lattice and driven to the four-level N configuration. In each period, the atoms exhibit a Gaussian density distribution with the average atomic density N (1 + Δ).
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