Abstract
A theoretical and experimental investigation of the generation of squeezed states of light has been carried out for a system of two-level atoms inside a high-finesse cavity. The regime that we consider is such that the coupling of atoms to the cavity mode produces a splitting in the normal mode structure of the atom-field system (the so-called vacuum-field Rabi splitting). We have employed this splitting to generate squeezing with observed reductions in photocurrent noise of 30 % below the shot-noise level. A degree of squeezing of ~50% is inferred for the field state in the absence of propagation and detection losses. Squeezing has been observed in two different cavity geometries with quite different coupling coefficients. In each case, the frequency of best squeezing corresponds to that of the normal mode splitting (g= single atom coupling coefficent and N = number of atoms) in good agreement with our theoretical predictions. Regions of parameter space with very large degrees of squeezing (>20×) are identified. Preliminary extensions of the theory into a transient regime with (cavity lifetime) ≪ (interaction time) ≪ (atomic lifetime) are described.
© 1987 Optical Society of America
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