Abstract
Zero-point electromagnetic fields were first introduced to explain the origin of atomic spontaneous emission. Vacuum fluctuations associated with the zero-point energy in cavities are now utilized in quantum devices such as single-photon sources, quantum memories, switches and network nodes. Here we present three-dimensional (3D) imaging of vacuum fluctuations in a high-Q cavity based on the measurement of position-dependent emission of single atoms. Atomic position localization is achieved by using a nanoscale atomic beam aperture scannable in front of the cavity mode. The 3D structure of the cavity vacuum is reconstructed from the cavity output. The root mean squared amplitude of the vacuum field at the antinode is also measured to be 0.92±0.07 V cm−1. The present work utilizing a single atom as a probe for sub-wavelength imaging demonstrates the utility of nanometre-scale technology in cavity quantum electrodynamics.
Similar content being viewed by others
Introduction
Single nanoscopic particles such as atoms1, molecules2,3,4 and quantum dots5 are an ideal probe for sub-wavelength imaging applications. A single atom, in particular, is an ultimate detector for electromagnetic fields owing to its sub-nanometre size and strong interaction with light6. For sub-wavelength imaging with single atoms, it is then necessary to localize the atoms in the nanometre scale. Single ions confined in space with specially arranged electrodes have been used as a probe for mapping the transverse and axial profile of an intracavity electromagnetic field7,8.
Implementing such localization with single neutral atoms is rather difficult in contrast to single ions. Nonetheless, a single neutral atom was tightly localized in an optical lattice in the Lamb–Dicke regime9,10 and its spectrum was observed to determine its inter-potential-well tunnelling rate11. An intracavity dipole trap was used to confine a single neutral atom near an antinode for maximum atom–cavity interaction while heating effects induced uncertain atomic delocalization12. Recently, three-dimensional (3D) sideband cooling13 was demonstrated to localize single atoms tightly in a cavity. However, it was not yet possible to scan their positions continuously in the nanometre scale for advanced photonics applications using the atom–cavity coupling constant as a variable14,15.
Vacuum fluctuations, the subject of imaging in the present study, arise from the creation and annihilation of virtual particles. Macroscopically, the vacuum energy density associated with the vacuum fluctuations is known to be proportional to the cosmological constant16. Microscopically, vacuum fluctuations lead to the Lamb shift17 and the spontaneous emission of atoms. Moreover, the Casimir effect18 was observed between two metallic plates or dielectric mirrors. The cavity vacuum, coupled with single atoms19,20,21, superconducting qubits17, cold atomic ensembles22,23 and Bose–Einstein condensates24, makes it possible to perform a wide range of fundamental studies based on its spatial structure1,25,26 and amplified strength27,28,29.
Although the vacuum field has no classical counterpart, it is common practice to assume its spatial structure based on the solution of Maxwell’s equations1,18,30. The root mean squared (r.m.s.) amplitude of a vacuum field is then obtained from zero-point energy in the quantum electrodynamics theory. Under field quantization in the absence of dissipation31, the r.m.s. vacuum field corresponding to a TEM00 mode of a Fabry–Pérot-type cavity is given by
when the mirror spacing is much less than the Rayleigh range. Here ε0 is the permittivity of vacuum, V is the mode volume, w0 is the cavity mode waist and λ(ω) is the resonant wavelength (angular frequency). An excited two-level atom resonant with this vacuum field would then undergo a vacuum-field-driven transition, the rate of which for a short interaction time is proportional to the vacuum intensity .
Previously, the spatial structure of the vacuum field in a cavity was partially revealed with single trapped ions under more dominant interactions with free-space vacuum32. The r.m.s. amplitude of the vacuum field was also obtained from measurements of vacuum Rabi frequency 2g(r)≡2μEvac(r)/ħ, with μ being the atomic induced dipole moment30. However, all of these measurements were either limited to a fixed atomic position with uncertain delocalization effects12 and unwanted displacement of the atomic equilibrium position8 or averaged over several wavelengths33.
Here we introduce a nanohole array34 to control the atomic position and use single atoms as a nanoscopic probe for the vacuum field in the cavity. Pre-excited single atoms in the cavity respond to the cavity vacuum field and emit single photons to the cavity mode. We measure the photons emitted out the cavity. The number of photons is then proportional to the vacuum-field intensity. We map out the vacuum intensity distribution by scanning the nanohole array along two transverse directions. The vacuum intensity profile along the direction of atomic beam is obtained from the transit-time broadening in the atom–cavity detuning dependence of the observed signal. In this way, the 3D profile of the vacuum-field intensity is imaged with a spatial resolution of about 170 nm, which is mostly limited by the nanohole diameter.
Result
Design of experiment
An ideal experimental scheme to image the vacuum-field intensity of equation (1) is sketched in Fig. 1. A key element is a nanohole atomic beam aperture, whose hole diameter is much smaller than λ. Atomic position localization and short interaction time are achieved by injecting excited two-level atoms one by one at a large velocity through the nanohole aperture. The aperture position is scanned along the axial (z) and transverse (x) directions just in front of the cavity mode. The interaction time τ between the atom and the cavity mode is so brief that the vacuum Rabi angle 2g(r)τ is much smaller than unity. Another requirement is that the injected atom should interact mostly with the cavity vacuum. Its free-space emission should be negligible during the transit through the cavity and the photon emitted by a preceding atom should decay the cavity well before the entry of the next atom. The latter is equivalent to the condition that the intracavity mean photon number ‹n› in the steady state should be much less than unity. The atomic emission rate, and thus ‹n›, will then be proportional to the intensity of the zero-point electromagnetic field fluctuating in the single cavity mode. Variation of along the atomic path (in the y direction) is encoded in the transit-time broadened atom–cavity scan curve of ‹n› (ref. 35). Combining this information, we can reconstruct the 3D structure of the vacuum field.
The above experimental scheme performed in the linear regime (that is, negligible Rabi angle and ‹n›<<1) does not provide the actual r.m.s. amplitude Evac(0) of the vacuum field. However, the r.m.s. amplitude can be obtained from measurements in the nonlinear regime (that is, appreciable Rabi angle and ‹n› comparable to or larger than unity), corresponding to the emergence of one-atom lasing27,36. This will be explained below and also in Supplementary Notes 1 and 2.
In our actual experiment depicted in Fig. 1b–d, we use a Fabry–Pérot-type cavity made of two mirrors with a 10-cm radius of curvature and a 1.09-mm mirror spacing. The resulting Rayleigh range is 7.4 mm and thus the mode waist w0 is expected to remain almost constant at 43 μm (the largest variation less than 0.1 μm) along the entire axial (z) range of the mode. We employ a supersonic beam of 138Ba atoms and utilize its 1S0↔3P1 transition with λ=791.1 nm and γ=2π × 50 kHz, the free-space spontaneous emission rate. The maximum atom–cavity coupling constant g0=μEvac(0)/ħ is expected to be 2π × 330 kHz, which surpasses γ and the cavity decay rate κ=2π × 140 kHz, thus putting our experiment in the strong coupling regime. The cooperativity parameter is 16.
Although only one nanohole is assumed in the above ideal scheme, in actual experiments it is impossible to have an intracavity mean atom number ‹N› sufficient to yield a reasonable signal-to-noise ratio for ‹n› even at the highest atomic beam flux when only one nanohole is used. Instead, we employ an array of nanoholes with a period of λ/2 (Fig. 1d) to increase ‹N› to a practical level ranging from 0.1 to 1.5. This approach is acceptable since the vacuum field of interest is expected to be periodic along the cavity axis, based on the mode solution of Maxwell’s equations. It works even for an arbitrary cavity vacuum via Fourier transform as discussed below and in Supplementary Fig. 2 and Supplementary Discussion. The nanoholes with a diameter of 170 nm were milled with the focused ion beam (FIB) technique on a 75-nm-thick silicon nitride membrane (Fig. 1d). The total number of holes is 72 × 16 in the z × x directions, spanning a range of 28.5 μm × 6.3 μm on the membrane. Since the x direction span range is much smaller than the mode waist w0, we have enough imaging resolution in that direction.
3D imaging of cavity vacuum
The trace in Fig. 2a shows the observed ‹n› as a function of the z coordinate of the nanohole array, while its x coordinate is fixed near the mode centre (x=0). We keep the cavity on resonance with a feed-forward technique (Supplementary Methods). The oscillatory feature comes about since the atomic emission rate is enhanced/suppressed when the nanohole columns are aligned with the antinodes/nodes of the cavity vacuum. The data in Fig. 2 were obtained with an optimal value of ‹N›(=0.34), which simultaneously maximize the signal-to-noise and the probability of having zero photons in the cavity when each atom arrives at the mode. The probability is more than 91%, and therefore we can attribute the oscillatory feature mostly to the spatial variation of the cavity vacuum. The vacuum Rabi angle 2g0τ acquired during the entire transit time along an antinode is only 0.12π, justifying that the data were taken in the linear regime. Any deviation from the linearity will show up in the fitting error (Supplementary Note 3). The observed ‹n› is in good agreement with the theory curve based on the quantum master equation27,37 with a period of λ/2.
The limited visibility in Fig. 2a is due to the atomic position spread after the nanoholes. To reveal the latent structure of the vacuum field, we deconvolved the raw data while regarding the atomic spatial distribution as a point spread function. The Richardson–Lucy algorithm38 was used for deconvolution. Combining similar traces measured for seven different x coordinates at a 15-μm interval, we then obtain the curve in Fig. 2b, which is proportional to an integrated over the y coordinate when an atom is injected onto a point in the x–z plane. Fitting the trace for each x coordinate with a sine-squared function in z yields a resonant wavelength of λ=791.0±0.6 nm, consistent with the known transition wavelength of barium.
The temporal profile of the vacuum field along the y direction during the atomic transit is obtained by Fourier transforming the amplitude associated with the transit-time broadened atom–cavity scan curve in Fig. 2c (ref. 35), which was taken with the aperture position fixed. Using the atomic velocity of 830 m s−1 independently measured with Doppler spectroscopy, we obtain the spatial profile of the vacuum field along the y direction. Combining the information from all three axes, we can reconstruct the 3D structure of the vacuum-field intensity as shown in Fig. 2d. The resulting profile in the x(y) direction is a Gaussian with a mode waist of 41±2 μm (43±1 μm), agreeing well with the expectations from the cavity geometry within the experimental uncertainty. An iso-surface of [Evac(x,y,z)/Evac(0)]2=0.2 is also shown in Fig. 2e.
The r.m.s. amplitude of the cavity vacuum field
We have also obtained the actual r.m.s. amplitude Evac(0) of the vacuum field from an independent experiment in the nonlinear regime. The cavity output was recorded as the nanoholes were scanned along z axis by λ/4, from a node to an antinode, for three different ‹N› (Fig. 3 inset). The amplitude Evac(0) was then obtained by fitting the nonlinear data in Fig. 3, with the solution of the master equation with Evac(0), ‹n› and ‹N› as fitting parameters (Supplementary Note 3). Since the data in Fig. 3 contain nonlinear interactions between the atom and the cavity mode as a result of appreciable ‹n›~1, the three parameters are uniquely determined by the fit. All of the ‹n› and ‹N› values appearing in Fig. 2 and Fig. 3 have been calibrated with this method. The fit also gives the r.m.s. amplitude Evac(0)=0.92±0.07 V cm−1.
Discussion
The cavity mode volume V in equation (1) can be obtained by spatially integrating the absolute square of the mode function f(r)=Evac(r)/Evac(0). The mode function is given by the w0 and λ values obtained from our 3D imaging experiment and the mirror spacing measured from the microscope image of the cavity39. The integration yields a mode volume of 1.5±0.1 nl. This value is in good agreement with a dissipation-free mode volume V0 of 1.52±0.04 nl calculated from the cavity geometry, that is, the radius of curvature of mirrors and the mirror spacing. The observed mode volume then yields a dissipation-free r.m.s. amplitude of the vacuum field as 0.97±0.03 V cm−1, based on the assumption of zero-point energy conservation40.
This value is in good agreement with the r.m.s. amplitude Evac(0) obtained from the above nonlinear-regime experiment. The small discrepancy may draw one’s attention to the long-standing problem of the field quantization in open systems, related to the sustainability of the zero-point energy and the uncertainty principle under dissipations41. However, the current experimental accuracy and precision does not mandate such considerations.
Although a specific cavity vacuum field is investigated in the present work, our approach can provide complete imaging of an arbitrary cavity vacuum via Fourier transform. The cavity output signal obtained as a function of the nanohole array position like the trace in Fig. 2a is the convolution of the vacuum intensity distribution and the response function of the nanohole array. We can then use the convolution theorem to obtain the Fourier transform of the vacuum intensity distribution as the ratio of Fourier transform of the convoluted trace to that of the response function (Supplementary Discussion). This approach works in the imaging in the x–z plane orthogonal to the atomic beam direction. An arbitrary longitudinal (y direction) profile can be extracted from the transit-time broadened atom–cavity scan curves taken at various atomic incidence angles in the x–y plane.
In summary, we have performed 3D imaging of the vacuum-field intensity in a cavity by using single two-level atoms as a nanoscopic probe and a nanohole array for atomic position localization. We have also measured the r.m.s. amplitude of the vacuum field from the nonlinear-regime experiment. Any other vacuum-field mode with a different frequency can in principle also be imaged by choosing a different atom resonant with it, except for very short wavelengths at which the mirrors do not function properly18. Moreover, the periodic nanohole array enables precise control of the atom–cavity coupling constant in cavity quantum electrodynamics studies. One application might be controlled phase imprinting on atoms before they enter the cavity mode, which would be essential for exciting a bi-phase field or a Schrödinger cat state in the cavity42.
Methods
Nanohole array
The nanohole array was made of a 75-nm-thick silicon nitride membrane (250 μm × 250 μm) with each hole with a diameter of 170 nm milled using the FIB technique (FIB200 by FEI). Typical milling current and voltage were 1.0 nA and 30.0 kV, respectively. It took about 30 s for fabrication of 72 × 16 nanoholes. To obtain FIB images, as in Fig. 1d, of nanoholes without damaging them, FIB scanning with 10.0 pA/30.0 kV was appropriate.
For the experiments done in the linear regime, we used an aperture with 72 × 16 holes in the z × x directions, spanning a range of 28.5 μm × 6.3 μm on the membrane. For the nonlinear-regime experiment requiring ‹N› to be more than unity, we used a nanohole array with the x range of nanoholes extended twice, that is, 72 × 32 holes with a hole diameter of 230 nm. The nanohole array assembly was mounted on a nanometre-precision positioner and its z coordinate was tracked in real time by a Michelson interferometer with one arm attached on the aperture mount.
Cavity modification
The de Broglie wavelength of the atoms injected into the cavity is 3.4±0.3 pm, which guarantees that atomic matter–wave diffraction by the nanoholes is negligible. However, the atomic beam itself has a small but finite angular divergence of 0.24 mrad. Unless the nanohole array is placed within 500 μm from the cavity mode axis, atomic position localization with a reasonable contrast cannot be achieved. We solved this problem by grinding one side of the mirror (7.75 mm in diameter and 8 mm in length) with a diamond wheel in the shape of ‘L’ down to 300 μm from the mode without damaging the remaining mirror surface (see Fig. 1b,c)39. During the grinding, the mirror surface was covered with a polymer coat for protection. We found the cavity finesse unchanged from its original value of 1.0 × 106.
Additional information
How to cite this article: Lee, M. et al. Three-dimensional imaging of cavity vacuum with single atoms localized by a nanohole array. Nat. Commun. 5:3441 doi: 10.1038/ncomms4441 (2014).
Change history
11 March 2014
The HTML version of this Article previously published incorrectly named Moonjoo Lee as corresponding author. This has now been corrected in the HTML; the PDF version of the paper was correct from the time of publication.
References
Hood, C. J., Lynn, T. W., Doherty, A. C., Parkins, A. S. & Kimble, H. J. The atom-cavity microscope: single atoms bound in orbit by single photons. Science 287, 1447–1453 (2000).
Vollmer, F. & Arnold, S. Whispering-gallery-mode biosensing: label-free detection down to single molecules. Nat. Methods 5, 591–596 (2008).
Rasnik, I., McKinney, S. A. & Ha, T. Nonblinking and long-lasting single-molecule fluorescence imaging. Nat. Methods 3, 891–893 (2006).
Cang, H. et al. Probing the electromagnetic field of a 15-nanometre hotspot by single molecule imaging. Nature 385, 385–389 (2011).
Ropp, C. et al. Nanoscale imaging and spontaneous emission control with a single nano-positioned quantum dot. Nat. Commun. 4, 1447 (2013).
Streed, E. W., Jechow, A., Norton, B. G. & Kielpinski, D. Absorption imaging of a single atom. Nat. Commun. 3, 933 (2012).
Guthöhrlein, G. R., Keller, M., Hayasaka, K., Lange, W. & Walther, H. A single ion as a nanoscopic probe of an optical field. Nature 414, 49–51 (2001).
Steiner, M., Meyer, H. M., Deutsch, C., Reichel, J. & Köhl, M. Single ion coupled to an optical fiber cavity. Phys. Rev. Lett. 110, 043003 (2013).
Bloch, I., Dalibard, J. & Zwerger, W. Many-body physics with ultracold gases. Rev. Mod. Phys. 80, 885–964 (2008).
Boyd, M. M. et al. Optical atomic coherence at the 1-second time scale. Science 314, 1430–1433 (2006).
Kim, W. et al. Tunneling-induced spectral broadening of a single atom in a three-dimensional optical lattice. Nano Lett. 11, 729–733 (2011).
Maunz, P. et al. Normal-mode spectroscopy of a single-bound-atom-cavity system. Phys. Rev. Lett. 94, 033002 (2005).
Reiserer, A., Nölleke, C., Ritter, S. & Rempe, G. Ground-state cooling of a single atom at the center of an optical cavity. Phys. Rev. Lett. 110, 223003 (2013).
Dubin, F. et al. Quantum to classical transition in a single-ion laser. Nat. Phys. 6, 350–353 (2010).
Choi, Y. et al. Quasieigenstate coalescence in an atom-cavity quantum composite. Phys. Rev. Lett. 104, 153601 (2010).
Weinberg, S. The cosmological constant problem. Rev. Mod. Phys. 61, 1–23 (1989).
Fragner, A. et al. Resolving vacuum fluctuations in an electrical circuit by measuring the Lamb shift. Science 322, 1357–1360 (2008).
Casimir, H. B. G. On the attraction between two perfectly conducting plates. Proc. K. Ned. Akad. Wet. B 51, 793–795 (1948).
McKeever, J. et al. Deterministic generation of single photons from one atom trapped in a cavity. Science 303, 1992–1994 (2004).
Wilk, T., Webster, S. C., Kuhn, A. & Rempe, G. Single-atom single-photon quantum interface. Science 317, 488–490 (2007).
Ritter, S. et al. An elementary quantum network of single atoms in optical cavities. Nature 484, 195–200 (2012).
Tanji-Suzuki, H., Chen, W., Landig, R., Simon, J. & Vuletić, V. Vacuum-induced transparency. Science 333, 1266–1269 (2011).
Bohnet, J. G. et al. A steady-state superradiant laser with less than one intracavity photon. Nature 484, 78–81 (2012).
Brennecke, F., Ritter, S., Donner, T. & Esslinger, T. Cavity optomechanics with a Bose-Einstein condensate. Science 322, 235–238 (2008).
Haroche, S., Brune, M. & Raimond, J. M. Trapping atoms by the vacuum field in a cavity. Europhys. Lett. 14, 19–24 (1991).
Dual, J.-M. & Grangier, P. Vacuum-field atom trapping in a wide aperture spherical resonator. Eur. Phys. J. D 32, 195–200 (2005).
An, K., Childs, J. J., Dasari, R. R. & Feld, M. S. Microlaser: a laser with one atom in an optical resonator. Phys. Rev. Lett. 73, 3375–3378 (1994).
Choi, W. et al. Observation of sub-Poisson photon statistics in the cavity-QED microlaser. Phys. Rev. Lett. 96, 093603 (2006).
Hong, H.-G. et al. Spectrum of the cavity-qed microlaser: strong coupling effects in the frequency pulling at off-resonance. Phys. Rev. Lett. 109, 243601 (2012).
Raimond, J. M., Brune, M. & Haroche, S. Colloquium: manipulating quantum entanglement with atoms and photons in a cavity. Rev. Mod. Phys. 73, 565–582 (2001).
Milonni, P. W. The Quantum Vacuum Academic (1994).
Kreuter, A. et al. Spontaneous emission lifetime of a single trapped Ca+ ion in a high finesse cavity. Phys. Rev. Lett. 92, 203002 (2004).
Thompson, R. J., Rempe, G. & Kimble, H. J. Observation of normal-mode splitting for an atom in an optical cavity. Phys. Rev. Lett. 68, 1132–1135 (1992).
Kölbel, M. et al. Shadow-mask evaporation through monolayer-modified nanostencils. Nano Lett. 2, 1339–1343 (2002).
Demtröder, W. Laser Spectroscopy 3rd edn Springer (2002).
Meschede, D., Walther, H. & Müller, G. One-atom maser. Phys. Rev. Lett. 54, 551–554 (1985).
Filipowicz, P., Javanainen, J. & Meystre, P. Theory of a microscopic maser. Phys. Rev. A 34, 3077–3087 (1986).
Richardson, W. H. Bayesian-based iterative method of image restoration. J. Opt. Soc. Am. 62, 55–59 (1972).
Kim, J. et al. Prescribed nondegenerate high-order modes in an axial-asymmetric high-finesse Fabry-Perot microcavity. Opt. Lett. 37, 1457–1459 (2012).
Senitzky, I. R. Dissipation in quantum mechanics. The harmonic oscillator. Phys. Rev. 119, 670–679 (1960).
Dekker, H. Classical and quantum mechanics of the damped harmonic oscillators. Phys. Rep. 80, 1–112 (1981).
Kim, J., Song, Y. & An, K. inThe 23rd International Conference on Atomic Physics Tu–142Palaiseau: France, (2012).
Acknowledgements
We thank H. Nha, Y. Chough, Y.-I. Shin, H. Jeong and W. Jhe for helpful discussions. This work was supported by the Korea Research Foundation (Grant Nos. 20110015720 and 2013R1A1A2010821).
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Contributions
M.L. and K.A. designed the experiment. M.L., J.K., W.S., H.-G.H. and Y.S. performed the experiment. M.L. analysed the data and carried out theoretical investigations. K.A. supervised overall experimental and theoretical works. M.L. and K.A. wrote the manuscript. All authors participated in discussions.
Corresponding author
Ethics declarations
Competing interests
The authors declare no competing financial interests.
Supplementary information
Supplementary Information
Supplementary Figures 1-4, Supplementary Table 1, Supplementary Notes 1-3, Supplementary Discussion, Supplementary Methods and Supplementary References (PDF 771 kb)
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
Lee, M., Kim, J., Seo, W. et al. Three-dimensional imaging of cavity vacuum with single atoms localized by a nanohole array. Nat Commun 5, 3441 (2014). https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms4441
Received:
Accepted:
Published:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms4441
This article is cited by
-
Coherent optical two-photon resonance tomographic imaging in three dimensions
Communications Physics (2023)
-
A photonic quantum engine driven by superradiance
Nature Photonics (2022)
-
Hyperradiance by a stream of phase-correlated atomic dipole pairs traversing a high-Q cavity
Scientific Reports (2021)
-
Realization of superabsorption by time reversal of superradiance
Nature Photonics (2021)
-
Monolayer graphene as dissipative membrane in an optical resonator
Applied Physics B (2016)
Comments
By submitting a comment you agree to abide by our Terms and Community Guidelines. If you find something abusive or that does not comply with our terms or guidelines please flag it as inappropriate.