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Electric field metrology for SI traceability: Systematic measurement uncertainties in electromagnetically induced transparency in atomic vapor
236
Citations
17
References
2017
Year
Rf Electric FieldEngineeringAtomic Emission SpectroscopyMeasurementAbsorption SpectroscopyVacuum DeviceSilicon On InsulatorElectron SpectroscopyElectric FieldInstrumentationSystematic Measurement UncertaintiesElectrical EngineeringPrecision MeasurementPhysicsElectric Field MetrologyAtomic PhysicsRadiometryQuantum ChemistryField Strength MeasurementsSilicon DebuggingSi TraceabilityMicrowave SpectroscopyNatural SciencesSpectroscopyApplied PhysicsAtomic Fluorescence Spectroscopy
We investigate the relationship between the Rabi frequency (ΩRF, related to the applied electric field) and Autler-Townes (AT) splitting, when performing atom-based radio-frequency (RF) electric (E) field strength measurements using Rydberg states and electromagnetically induced transparency (EIT) in an atomic vapor. The AT splitting satisfies, under certain conditions, a well-defined linear relationship with the applied RF field amplitude. The EIT/AT-based E-field measurement approach derived from these principles is currently being investigated by several groups around the world as a means to develop a new SI-traceable RF E-field measurement technique. We establish conditions under which the measured AT-splitting is an approximately linear function of the RF electric field. A quantitative description of systematic deviations from the linear relationship is key to exploiting EIT/AT-based atomic-vapor spectroscopy for SI-traceable field measurement. We show that the linear relationship is valid and can be used to determine the E-field strength, with minimal error, as long as the EIT linewidth is small compared to the AT-splitting. We also discuss interesting aspects of the thermal dependence (i.e., hot- versus cold-atom) of this EIT-AT technique. An analysis of the transition from cold- to hot-atom EIT in a Doppler-mismatched cascade system reveals a significant change of the dependence of the EIT linewidth on the optical Rabi frequencies and of the AT-splitting on ΩRF.
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