Light propagation in systems involving two-dimensional atomic lattices
Pith reviewed 2026-05-25 18:28 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Stacks of 2D atomic lattices emulate regularly spaced atoms in a lossless 1D waveguide and cancel resonance shifts in 3D lattices.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
A stack of 2D lattices may emulate regularly spaced atoms in a lossless 1D waveguide, and in a suitable geometry the resonance shifts characteristic of 1D and 2D lattice structures may completely cancel to eliminate density dependent resonance shifts of atoms bound to a 3D lattice. A generalization to the case of anisotropic polarizability reveals light frequencies for which the lattice is either completely transparent or completely opaque.
What carries the argument
Plane-wave interaction between separated 2D lattices matching radiation from a continuous dipole distribution in the lattice plane.
If this is right
- A stack of 2D lattices emulates regularly spaced atoms in a lossless 1D waveguide.
- Resonance shifts characteristic of 1D and 2D lattice structures can completely cancel.
- Density dependent resonance shifts are eliminated for atoms bound to a 3D lattice.
- Anisotropic polarizability produces light frequencies at which the lattice is completely transparent or completely opaque.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The cancellation of shifts could allow construction of 3D optical lattices whose response is independent of atom density.
- The plane-wave equivalence might extend to predict propagation in other hybrid low-dimensional atomic arrays.
- Experiments with anisotropic atoms in magnetic fields could directly test the predicted transparency and opacity frequencies.
Load-bearing premise
When the distance between two 2D lattices is large enough and Bragg reflections are absent, the lattices interact as if they radiated a plane wave whose amplitude matches radiation from a dipole moment continuously distributed in the lattice plane.
What would settle it
Measurement of resonance frequency versus density in a stacked 3D lattice at the geometry where 1D and 2D shifts are predicted to cancel, showing no net density-dependent shift.
Figures
read the original abstract
We study the optical response of a 2D square lattice of atoms using classical electrodynamics. Due to dipole-dipole interactions, the lattice atoms polarize as if the lattice were an atom with up to three resonance frequencies, with cooperatively shifted resonances and altered transition linewidths. We show that when the distance between two 2D lattices is large enough and Bragg reflections are absent, the lattices interact among themselves as if they radiated a plane wave whose amplitude is in accordance with the radiation from a dipole moment continuously distributed in the lattice plane. We employ these results to study light propagation in stacks of 2D lattices, drawing on simple qualitative pictures of the response of a 2D lattice and light propagation in 1D waveguides. We show that a stack of 2D lattices may emulate regularly spaced atoms in a lossless 1D waveguide, and argue that in a suitable geometry the resonance shifts characteristic of 1D and 2D lattice structures may completely cancel to eliminate density dependent resonance shifts of atoms bound to a 3D lattice. A generalization to the case of anisotropic polarizability, such as in the presence of a magnetic field, reveals light frequencies induced by the magnetic field for which the lattice is either completely transparent, or completely opaque.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript applies classical electrodynamics to a 2D square lattice of atoms, showing that dipole-dipole interactions cause the lattice to respond with up to three cooperatively shifted resonances and modified linewidths. It establishes that, for sufficiently large separation and in the absence of Bragg reflections, two such lattices couple exactly as continuous dipole sheets radiating plane waves. These results are used to argue that stacks of 2D lattices can emulate regularly spaced atoms in a lossless 1D waveguide and that a suitable 3D geometry can cancel the density-dependent resonance shifts characteristic of 1D and 2D lattices. A generalization to anisotropic polarizability identifies frequencies at which the lattice is fully transparent or fully opaque.
Significance. If the central approximation holds with the claimed precision, the work supplies a transparent analytic framework for light propagation through atomic lattices and a concrete route to nulling density-dependent shifts in 3D systems. The 1D-emulation picture and the transparency/opacity conditions are potentially useful for designing lattice-based quantum optics experiments.
major comments (1)
- [Interaction between two 2D lattices] The section on interaction between two 2D lattices asserts that, for large enough separation and absent Bragg reflections, each lattice radiates exactly as a continuous dipole sheet whose amplitude matches the integrated polarization. No estimate is given for the size of corrections arising from the discrete lattice sum, finite polarizability tensor, or residual evanescent components. Because this equivalence is used without qualification to derive the 1D-waveguide emulation and the exact cancellation of 1D+2D shifts, the absence of a quantitative error bound makes the cancellation claim load-bearing and unverified.
minor comments (1)
- [Abstract and §2] The abstract and main text refer to “up to three resonance frequencies” without an explicit statement of the lattice symmetry or the polarizability tensor components that produce this multiplicity.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the careful reading and constructive comments. Below we respond point-by-point to the single major comment. We have revised the manuscript to incorporate an explicit discussion of the error terms.
read point-by-point responses
-
Referee: The section on interaction between two 2D lattices asserts that, for large enough separation and absent Bragg reflections, each lattice radiates exactly as a continuous dipole sheet whose amplitude matches the integrated polarization. No estimate is given for the size of corrections arising from the discrete lattice sum, finite polarizability tensor, or residual evanescent components. Because this equivalence is used without qualification to derive the 1D-waveguide emulation and the exact cancellation of 1D+2D shifts, the absence of a quantitative error bound makes the cancellation claim load-bearing and unverified.
Authors: We thank the referee for this observation. The equivalence follows from the far-field radiation of a periodic array: when Bragg reflections are absent, all non-zero reciprocal-lattice components of the dipole sum produce only evanescent fields that decay exponentially with distance from the plane, leaving a propagating plane wave whose amplitude is fixed by the spatially averaged polarization. The self-consistent solution already incorporates the full (possibly anisotropic) polarizability tensor. We nevertheless agree that an explicit bound on the size of the residual corrections for finite but large separation strengthens the presentation. In the revised manuscript we have added a short paragraph that estimates these corrections: the leading evanescent contribution falls as exp(−2π d/a) (d = inter-lattice distance, a = lattice constant) while the discrete-to-continuous difference in the propagating component is O((ka)^2) for ka ≪ 1. These scalings justify applying the continuous-sheet limit to the 1D-emulation and shift-cancellation arguments, which remain exact inside the stated regime. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No circularity; derivation applies standard electrodynamics to lattice geometry
full rationale
The paper presents the continuous-dipole-sheet equivalence for distant 2D lattices (absent Bragg reflections) as a derived result from classical electrodynamics, not as a definition or fitted input. Subsequent applications to 1D emulation and resonance-shift cancellation are obtained by combining this result with qualitative waveguide pictures; no equations reduce the claimed outcomes to input parameters by construction, and no self-citations or ansatzes are invoked as load-bearing steps. The central claims therefore remain independent of the paper's own outputs.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (2)
- domain assumption Classical electrodynamics governs the optical response of the atomic lattices.
- domain assumption Dipole-dipole interactions are the dominant mechanism producing collective polarization.
Reference graph
Works this paper leans on
-
[1]
4 π (θ = 0 means perpendicular incidence and θ = 0. 5 π would be light coming in along the lattice plane), and the projection of the wave vector onto the lattice plane makes the angle φ = 0. 125 π with the x axis, i.e., bisects the an- gle between the x axis and the direction that, in turn, bisects the angle between the x and y axes. The polar- ization of...
-
[2]
537 × 2π (compare with the lattice spacing 0 . 55 × 2π in Fig. 9) such a confluence of the resonances in fact occurs. VII. DISCUSSION We have investigated the optical response of atoms bound to a 2D lattice, allowing for non-normal incidence and anisotropic polarizability that occurs when a mag- netic field is present. We have also explicitly looked into th...
-
[3]
We wish to have auto- mated control of the limits, given a prescribed goal for precision
Richardson extrapolation In the computations of the self-sum and the transfer sum we have to do two limits. We wish to have auto- mated control of the limits, given a prescribed goal for precision. This is a fairly demanding problem in numer- ical analysis. Here we describe our solution. By symmetry, the sum in (7) can be carried out in the first quadrant ...
-
[4]
The 17 integral over the angles is easy to carry out analytically using Mathe matica
Transfer matrix As to the long-distance analytical form of the transfer matrix, (3 8) and (39), we firstly without further ado replace the sum (36) with an integral over the site index n, and express it in terms of polar coordinates in the plane. The 17 integral over the angles is easy to carry out analytically using Mathe matica. We choose the propagation...
-
[5]
6%, is probably fortuitous, but it lends credence to our methods. Representative results are shown in Fig. 11, which plots the shift divided by the filling factor, s/ζ , as a function s/ζ × × × × × ζ FIG. 11. Line shift s divided by the filling factor ζ as a func- tion of the filling factor ζ, with statistical standard deviations. Black filled circles: R ...
-
[6]
Up to the point when all results are put to- gether, we deal with the tensor A
Write the polarizability tensor in the form A = A/ω . Up to the point when all results are put to- gether, we deal with the tensor A. Compare this with the standard undergraduate exercise, in which one would make the resonance approximation by writing the resonance denominator as ω 2 − ω 2 0 = (ω − ω 0)(ω + ω 0) ≃ 2ω ∆. We are getting ahead of things here...
-
[7]
Write the tensor A in terms of ω 0 and ω = ω 0 + ∆
-
[8]
Expand all components of the tensor A as partial fractions with the first power of ∆ in the denomi- nators, zeroth power in the numerators
-
[9]
Replace each partial fraction with the leading term in its expansion in the limit ω 0 → ∞
-
[10]
Keep only the partial fractions that are of the dom- inant, zeroth, order in ω 0. This approximation produces terms with resonance de- nominators of the form ∆ + iγ and ∆ ± ΩB + iγ, where ΩB = qB/ 2m is half of the cyclotron frequency for the given magnetic field B. Finally, we compare these results in the case of zero magnetic field with the expression (3)...
-
[11]
Cooperative Lamb shift in an atomic vapor layer of nanometer thickness,
J. Keaveney, A. Sargsyan, U. Krohn, I. G. Hughes, D. Sarkisyan, and C. S. Adams, “Cooperative Lamb shift in an atomic vapor layer of nanometer thickness,” Phys. Rev. Lett. 108, 173601 (2012)
work page 2012
-
[12]
J. Pellegrino, R. Bourgain, S. Jennewein, Y. R. P. Sor- tais, A. Browaeys, S. D. Jenkins, and J. Ruostekoski, “Observation of suppression of light scattering induced by dipole-dipole interactions in a cold-atom ensemble,” Phys. Rev. Lett. 113, 133602 (2014)
work page 2014
-
[13]
Cooperative emission of a pulse train in an optically thick scattering medium,
C. C. Kwong, T. Yang, D. Delande, R. Pier- rat, and D. Wilkowski, “Cooperative emission of a pulse train in an optically thick scattering medium,” Phys. Rev. Lett. 115, 223601 (2015)
work page 2015
-
[14]
Collective atomic scattering and motional effects in a dense coher- ent medium,
S. L. Bromley, B. Zhu, M. Bishof, X. Zhang, T. Both- well, J. Schachenmayer, T. L. Nicholson, R. Kaiser, S. F. Yelin, M. D. Lukin, A. M. Rey, and J. Ye, “Collective atomic scattering and motional effects in a dense coher- ent medium,” Nat Commun 7, 11039 (2016)
work page 2016
-
[15]
Subradiance in a large cloud of cold atoms,
William Guerin, Michelle O. Ara´ ujo, and Robin Kaiser, “Subradiance in a large cloud of cold atoms,” 20 Phys. Rev. Lett. 116, 083601 (2016)
work page 2016
-
[16]
Coherent scattering of near- resonant light by a dense microscopic cold atomic cloud,
S. Jennewein, M. Besbes, N. J. Schilder, S. D. Jenkins, C. Sauvan, J. Ruostekoski, J.-J. Greffet, Y. R. P. Sor- tais, and A. Browaeys, “Coherent scattering of near- resonant light by a dense microscopic cold atomic cloud,” Phys. Rev. Lett. 116, 233601 (2016)
work page 2016
-
[17]
S. J. Roof, K. J. Kemp, M. D. Havey, and I. M. Sokolov, “Observation of single-photon superradiance and the co- operative Lamb shift in an extended sample of cold atoms,” Phys. Rev. Lett. 117, 073003 (2016)
work page 2016
-
[18]
Transmission of near- resonant light through a dense slab of cold atoms,
L. Corman, J. L. Ville, R. Saint-Jalm, M. Aidels- burger, T. Bienaim´ e, S. Nascimb` ene, J. Dal- ibard, and J. Beugnon, “Transmission of near- resonant light through a dense slab of cold atoms,” Phys. Rev. A 96, 053629 (2017)
work page 2017
-
[19]
One-dimensional mod- elling of light propagation in dense and degenerate sam- ples,
Juha Javanainen, Janne Ruostekoski, Bjarne Vester- gaard, and Matthew R. Francis, “One-dimensional mod- elling of light propagation in dense and degenerate sam- ples,” Phys. Rev. A 59, 649–666 (1999)
work page 1999
-
[20]
Absorption imaging of a quasi- two-dimensional gas: a multiple scattering analysis,
L Chomaz, L Corman, T Yefsah, R Desbuquois, and J Dalibard, “Absorption imaging of a quasi- two-dimensional gas: a multiple scattering analysis,” New Journal of Physics 14, 055001 (2012)
work page 2012
-
[21]
Cooperativity in light scattering by cold atoms,
N. Piovella T. Bienaim´ e, R. Bachelard and R. Kaiser, “Cooperativity in light scattering by cold atoms,” Fortschr. Phys. 61, 377 (2013)
work page 2013
-
[22]
Shifts of a resonance line in a dense atomic sample,
Juha Javanainen, Janne Ruostekoski, Yi Li, and Sung- Mi Yoo, “Shifts of a resonance line in a dense atomic sample,” Phys. Rev. Lett. 112, 113603 (2014)
work page 2014
-
[23]
Collec- tive dipole-dipole interactions in an atomic array,
R. T. Sutherland and F. Robicheaux, “Collec- tive dipole-dipole interactions in an atomic array,” Phys. Rev. A 94, 013847 (2016)
work page 2016
-
[24]
Light scattering from dense cold atomic media,
Bihui Zhu, John Cooper, Jun Ye, and Ana Maria Rey, “Light scattering from dense cold atomic media,” Phys. Rev. A 94, 023612 (2016)
work page 2016
-
[25]
Exact electrodynamics versus standard optics for a slab of cold dense gas,
Juha Javanainen, Janne Ruostekoski, Yi Li, and Sung-Mi Yoo, “Exact electrodynamics versus standard optics for a slab of cold dense gas,” Phys. Rev. A 96, 033835 (2017)
work page 2017
-
[26]
John David Jackson, Classical Electrodynamics, 3rd ed. (Wiley, New York, 1999)
work page 1999
-
[27]
(Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK, 1999)
Max Born and Emil Wolf, Principles of Optics , 7th ed. (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK, 1999)
work page 1999
-
[28]
Light propa- gation beyond the mean-field theory of standard optics,
Juha Javanainen and Janne Ruostekoski, “Light propa- gation beyond the mean-field theory of standard optics,” Opt. Express 24, 993–1001 (2016)
work page 2016
-
[29]
Controlled manipulation of light by cooperative response of atoms in an optical lattice,
Stewart D. Jenkins and Janne Ruostekoski, “Controlled manipulation of light by cooperative response of atoms in an optical lattice,” Phys. Rev. A 86, 031602 (2012)
work page 2012
-
[30]
Enhanced optical cross section via collec- tive coupling of atomic dipoles in a 2D array,
Robert J. Bettles, Simon A. Gardiner, and Charles S. Adams, “Enhanced optical cross section via collec- tive coupling of atomic dipoles in a 2D array,” Phys. Rev. Lett. 116, 103602 (2016)
work page 2016
-
[31]
Cooperative optical response of 2D dense lattices with strongly correlated dipoles,
Sung-Mi Yoo and Sun Mok Paik, “Cooperative optical response of 2D dense lattices with strongly correlated dipoles,” Opt. Express 24, 2156–2165 (2016)
work page 2016
-
[32]
Sto r- ing light with subradiant correlations in arrays of atoms,
G. Facchinetti, S. D. Jenkins, and J. Ruostekoski, “Sto r- ing light with subradiant correlations in arrays of atoms,” Phys. Rev. Lett. 117, 243601 (2016)
work page 2016
-
[33]
G. Facchinetti and J. Ruostekoski, “Interaction of light with planar lattices of atoms: Reflec- tion, transmission, and cooperative magnetometry,” Phys. Rev. A 97, 023833 (2018)
work page 2018
-
[34]
Cooperative resonances in light scattering from two-dimensional atomic arrays,
Ephraim Shahmoon, Dominik S. Wild, Mikhail D. Lukin, and Susanne F. Yelin, “Cooperative resonances in light scattering from two-dimensional atomic arrays,” Phys. Rev. Lett. 118, 113601 (2017)
work page 2017
-
[35]
Topologi- cal quantum optics in two-dimensional atomic arrays,
J. Perczel, J. Borregaard, D. E. Chang, H. Pichler, S. F. Yelin, P. Zoller, and M. D. Lukin, “Topologi- cal quantum optics in two-dimensional atomic arrays,” Phys. Rev. Lett. 119, 023603 (2017)
work page 2017
-
[36]
Pho- tonic band structure of two-dimensional atomic lattices,
J. Perczel, J. Borregaard, D. E. Chang, H. Pich- ler, S. F. Yelin, P. Zoller, and M. D. Lukin, “Pho- tonic band structure of two-dimensional atomic lattices,” Phys. Rev. A 96, 063801 (2017)
work page 2017
-
[37]
Exponential im- provement in photon storage fidelities using subra- diance and “selective radiance
A. Asenjo-Garcia, M. Moreno-Cardoner, A. Albrecht, H. J. Kimble, and D. E. Chang, “Exponential im- provement in photon storage fidelities using subra- diance and “selective radiance” in atomic arrays,” Phys. Rev. X 7, 031024 (2017)
work page 2017
-
[38]
Topolog- ical properties of a dense atomic lattice gas,
Robert J. Bettles, Jiˇ r ´ ı Min´ aˇ r, Charles S. Adams, Igor Lesanovsky, and Beatriz Olmos, “Topolog- ical properties of a dense atomic lattice gas,” Phys. Rev. A 96, 041603 (2017)
work page 2017
-
[39]
Strongly coupled cold atoms in bilayer dense lattices,
Sung-Mi Yoo, “Strongly coupled cold atoms in bilayer dense lattices,” New Journal of Physics 20, 083012 (2018)
work page 2018
-
[40]
Metamaterial trans- parency induced by cooperative electromagnetic interac- tions,
S. D. Jenkins and J. Ruostekoski, “Metamaterial trans- parency induced by cooperative electromagnetic interac- tions,” Phys. Rev. Lett. 111, 147401 (2013)
work page 2013
-
[41]
Many-body subradiant excitations in metamaterial arrays: Experiment and theory,
Stewart D. Jenkins, Janne Ruostekoski, Nikitas Papasimakis, Salvatore Savo, and Nikolay I. Zheludev, “Many-body subradiant excitations in metamaterial arrays: Experiment and theory,” Phys. Rev. Lett. 119, 053901 (2017)
work page 2017
-
[42]
Photonic band gaps in optical lattices,
I. H. Deutsch, R. J. C. Spreeuw, S. L. Rolston, and W. D. Phillips, “Photonic band gaps in optical lattices,” Phys. Rev. A 52, 1394–1410 (1995)
work page 1995
-
[43]
Fam Le Kien, V. I. Balykin, and K. Hakuta, “Atom trap and waveguide using a two-color evanescent light field around a subwavelength-diameter optical fiber,” Phys. Rev. A 70, 063403 (2004)
work page 2004
-
[44]
E. Vetsch, D. Reitz, G. Sagu´ e, R. Schmidt, S. T. Dawkins, and A. Rauschenbeutel, “Optical inter- face created by laser-cooled atoms trapped in the evanescent field surrounding an optical nanofiber,” Phys. Rev. Lett. 104, 203603 (2010)
work page 2010
-
[45]
Nanopho- tonic quantum phase switch with a single atom,
T. G. Tiecke, J. D. Thompson, N. P. de Leon, L. R. Liu, V. Vuleti´ c, and M. D. Lukin, “Nanopho- tonic quantum phase switch with a single atom,” Nature 508, 241 EP – (2014)
work page 2014
-
[46]
Atom–light interactions in photonic crystals,
A. Goban, C. L. Hung, S. P. Yu, J. D. Hood, J. A. Muniz, J. H. Lee, M. J. Martin, A. C. McClung, K. S. Choi, D. E. Chang, O. Painter, and H. J. Kimble, “Atom–light interactions in photonic crystals,” Nat Commun 5, 3808 (2014)
work page 2014
-
[47]
Quantum many-body models with cold atoms coupled to photonic crystals,
J. S. Douglas, H. Habibian, C. L. Hung, A. V. Gorshkov, H. J. Kimble, and D. E. Chang, “Quantum many-body models with cold atoms coupled to photonic crystals,” Nat. Photon. 9, 326–331 (2015)
work page 2015
-
[48]
Superradiance for atoms trapped along a photonic crystal waveguide,
A. Goban, C.-L. Hung, J. D. Hood, S.-P. Yu, J. A. Muniz, O. Painter, and H. J. Kimble, “Superradiance for atoms trapped along a photonic crystal waveguide,” Phys. Rev. Lett. 115, 063601 (2015)
work page 2015
-
[49]
Coherent backscattering of light off one-dimensional atomic strings,
H. L. Sørensen, J.-B. B´ eguin, K. W. Kluge, I. Iakoupov, A. S. Sørensen, J. H. M¨ uller, E. S. Polzik, and J. Ap- pel, “Coherent backscattering of light off one-dimensional atomic strings,” Phys. Rev. Lett. 117, 133604 (2016). 21
work page 2016
-
[50]
Large Bragg reflection from one-dimensional chains of trapped atoms near a nanoscale waveguide,
Neil V. Corzo, Baptiste Gouraud, Aveek Chan- dra, Akihisa Goban, Alexandra S. Sheremet, Dmitriy V. Kupriyanov, and Julien Laurat, “Large Bragg reflection from one-dimensional chains of trapped atoms near a nanoscale waveguide,” Phys. Rev. Lett. 117, 133603 (2016)
work page 2016
-
[51]
Janne Ruostekoski and Juha Javanainen, “Emer- gence of correlated optics in one-dimensional waveg- uides for classical and quantum atomic gases,” Phys. Rev. Lett. 117, 143602 (2016)
work page 2016
-
[52]
Arrays of strongly coupled atoms in a one-dimensional waveguide,
Janne Ruostekoski and Juha Javanainen, “Arrays of strongly coupled atoms in a one-dimensional waveguide,” Phys. Rev. A 96, 033857 (2017)
work page 2017
-
[53]
Controlling dipole-dipole frequency shifts in a lattice-based optical atomic clock,
D. E. Chang, Jun Ye, and M. D. Lukin, “Controlling dipole-dipole frequency shifts in a lattice-based optical atomic clock,” Phys. Rev. A 69, 023810 (2004)
work page 2004
-
[54]
Quantum field theory of cooperative atom response: Low light inten- sity,
Janne Ruostekoski and Juha Javanainen, “Quantum field theory of cooperative atom response: Low light inten- sity,” Phys. Rev. A 55, 513–526 (1997)
work page 1997
-
[55]
W. H. Press, S. A. Teukolski, V. A. Vetterling, and B. P. Flannery, Numerical Recipes: The art of scientific com- puting, 3rd ed. (Cambridge University Press, NY, 2007)
work page 2007
-
[56]
There is a functionally equivalent figure in the Supple- mental Material of Ref. [24]
-
[57]
Collisional relaxation of atomic excited states, line broadening and interatomic interactions,
E.L. Lewis, “Collisional relaxation of atomic excited states, line broadening and interatomic interactions,” Physics Reports 58, 1 – 71 (1980)
work page 1980
-
[58]
Juha Javanainen, “The Software Atom,” Computer Physics Communications 212, 1 – 7 (2017)
work page 2017
-
[59]
Polarium model: Coherent radiation by a resonant medium,
Sudhakar Prasad and Roy J. Glauber, “Polarium model: Coherent radiation by a resonant medium,” Phys. Rev. A 61, 063814 (2000)
work page 2000
-
[60]
Anatoly A. Svidzinsky, Jun-Tao Chang, and Marlan O. Scully, “Cooperative spontaneous emission of n atoms: Many-body eigenstates, the effect of virtual Lamb shift processes, and analogy with radiation of n classical oscil- lators,” Phys. Rev. A 81, 053821 (2010)
work page 2010
-
[61]
Near-resonance light scatter- ing from a high-density ultracold atomic 87Rb gas,
S. Balik, A. L. Win, M. D. Havey, I. M. Sokolov, and D. V. Kupriyanov, “Near-resonance light scatter- ing from a high-density ultracold atomic 87Rb gas,” Phys. Rev. A 87, 053817 (2013)
work page 2013
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.