Abstract
The interaction between two-state atoms and the modes of an optical cavity has been studied extensively over many years; in particular, in connection with lasers and optical bistability. These are dissipative systems, and it has been usual in their study to assume that dissipation rates are, in some sense, large compared with the coupling strength between the atoms and the field. Recent work has shown that interesting new dynamical behavior occurs when this is not so. For example, spontaneous emission linewidths can be altered,1,2 and if the coupling is very strong, an emission line can be split into a pair of resonances identified with the normal- mode frequencies of coupled oscillators describing the atomic polarization and the cavity field.3.4 Altered linewidths and normal-mode splitting are features of weak excitation; both are explained by a coupled damped harmonic oscillator model. In this paper we report new results obtained for strong excitation.
© 1991 Optical Society of America
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