Publication | Open Access
Transfer of orbital angular momentum of light using two-component slow light
86
Citations
55
References
2013
Year
PhotonicsQuantum ScienceOptical VorticesEngineeringQuantum OpticPhysicsOptical PropertiesOptical PhysicSlow LightApplied PhysicsClassical OpticsAtomic PhysicsCold AtomsTwo-component Slow LightOptical TrappingOptomechanicsOrbital Angular Momentum
We study the manipulation of slow light with an orbital angular momentum propagating in a cloud of cold atoms. Atoms are affected by four co-propagating control laser beams in a double tripod configuration of the atomic energy levels involved, allowing us to minimize the losses at the vortex core of the control beams. In such a situation the atomic medium is transparent for a pair of co-propagating probe fields, leading to the creation of two-component (spinor) slow light. We study the interaction between the probe fields when two control beams carry optical vortices of opposite helicity. As a result, a transfer of the optical vortex takes place from the control to the probe fields without switching off and on the control beams. This feature is missing in a single tripod scheme where the optical vortex can be transferred from the control to the probe field only during either the storage or retrieval of light.
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