AI Article Synopsis

  • Two-dimensional electronic spectroscopy (2DES) can be done using different geometries like BOXCARS and pump-probe, with pump-probe being more efficient due to less beam overlap.
  • While pump-probe is great for single-quantum dynamics, measuring double-quantum (2Q) coherence, which involves complex many-body interactions, has been challenging.
  • The study introduces an experimental method to extract 2Q coherence using a specific pulse sequence and advanced signal processing, demonstrated with rubidium atoms to reveal two-body dipole-dipole interactions.

Article Abstract

Two-dimensional electronic spectroscopy (2DES) can be implemented with different geometries, e.g., BOXCARS, collinear, and pump-probe geometries. The pump-probe geometry has the advantage of overlapping only two beams and reducing phase cycling steps. However, its applications are typically limited to observing the dynamics with single-quantum coherence and population, leaving the challenge to measure the dynamics of the double-quantum (2Q) coherence, which reflects the many-body interactions. We demonstrate an experimental technique in 2DES under pump-probe geometry with a designed pulse sequence and the signal processing method to extract 2Q coherence. In the designed pulse sequence, with the probe pulse arriving earlier than the pump pulses, our measured signal includes the 2Q signal as well as the zero-quantum signal. With phase cycling and data processing using causality enforcement, we extract the 2Q signal. The proposal is demonstrated with rubidium atoms. We observe the collective resonances of two-body dipole-dipole interactions in both the D1 and D2 lines.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/5.0198255DOI Listing

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