Document Type : Original Article

Authors

1 Department of Physics, Wolkite University, Ethiopia

2 Adama Science and Technology University, P. O. Box 07, Wolkite, Ethiopia

Abstract

In this paper we have studied the squeezing and entanglement properties of the cavity light generated by a three-level laser. In this quantum optical system, N three-level atoms available in an open cavity, coupled to a two-mode vacuum reservoir, are pumped to the top level by means of electron bombardment at constant rate. Applying the solutions of the equations of evolution for the expectation values of the atomic operators and the quantum Langevin equations for the cavity mode operators, we have calculated the mean, variance of the photon number, the quadrature squeezing, entanglement amplification as well as the normalized second-order correlation function for the cavity light. In addition, we have shown that the presence of the spontaneous emission process leads to a decrease in the mean and variance of the photon number. We have observed that the two-mode cavity light is in a squeezed state and the squeezing occurs in the minus quadrature. In addition, we have found that the effect of the vacuum reservoir noise is to increase the photon-number variance and to decrease the quadrature squeezing of the cavity light. However, the vacuum reservoir noise does not have any effect on the mean photon number. Moreover, the maximum quadrature squeezing of the light generated by the laser, operating far below threshold, is found to be  below the vacuum-state level. In addition, our result indicates that the quadrature squeezing is greater for  than that for  for 0.01 <   < 0.35 and is smaller for  than that for  for 0.35 <  < 1. We have also noted that the squeezing and entanglement in the two-mode light are directly related. As a result, an increase in the degree of squeezing directly leads to an increase in the degree of entanglement and vice versa. This shows that, whenever there is squeezing in the two-mode light, there exists an entanglement in the system.

Keywords

Main Subjects

  1. M O Scully, K  Wodkiewicz, M S  Zubairy, J  Bergou, N  Lu, and J  Meyer ter Vehn, Rev. Lett. 60 (1988) 1832.
  2. F Kassahun, “Fundamentals of Quantum Optics”, Lulu Press Inc., North Carolina (2010).
  3. N Lu, F X  Zhao, and J  Bergou, Rev. A 39 (1989) 5189.
  4. N A  Ansari, Rev. A 48 (1993) 4686.
  5. T Y Darge and F Kassahun, PMC Physics B, 1 (2010).
  6. E Alebachew and K Fesseha, Commun. 265 (2006) 314.
  7. M Alemu, Universal Journal of Electrical and Electronic Engineering 7, 3 (2020) 187.
  8. N A Ansari, J  Gea-Banacloche, and M S  Zubairy, Rev. A 41 (1990) 5179.
  9. F Kassahun, ArXiv:1105.1438v3 [quant-ph] 25 Sep 2012.
  10. F Kassahun, “Refined Quantum Analysis of Light”, Revised Edition, CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, (2016).
  11. C A Blockely and D F  Walls, Rev. A 43 (1991) 5049.
  12. K Fesseha, Rev. A 63 (2001) 33811.
  13. F Kassahun, Optics Communications, 284 (2011) 1357.
  14. F Kassahun, ArXiv.1611.01003v2[quan-Ph] 29 March 2018.
  15. T Abebe, J. Phys. 45 (2018) 357.
  16. S Tesfa, Rev. A, 74  (2006) 043816.
  17. M Alemu, Universal Journal of Physics and Application 14, 1 (2020) 11.
  18. L M Duan, G  Giedke, J I  Cirac, and P  Zoller, Rev. Lett. 84 (2000) 2722.
  19. M O Scully and M S  Zubairy, “Quantum Optics” Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, (1997).
  20. C Gerry and P L Knight, “Introductory Quantum Optics” Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, (2005).
  21. T Abebe, J. Phys. 63, 8 (2018) 733.

ارتقاء امنیت وب با وف ایرانی