5 years ago

Resonant-light diffusion in a disordered atomic layer.

N. Cherroret, Z. Hadzibabic, S. Nascimbene, L. Corman, D. Delande, J.L. Ville, M. Aidelsburger, J. Dalibard, J. Beugnon, R. Saint-Jalm

Light scattering in dense media is a fundamental problem of many-body physics, which is also relevant for the development of optical devices. In this work we investigate experimentally light propagation in a dense sample of randomly positioned resonant scatterers confined in a layer of sub-wavelength thickness. We locally illuminate the atomic cloud and monitor spatially-resolved fluorescence away from the excitation region. We show that light spreading is well described by a diffusion process, involving many scattering events in the dense regime. For light detuned from resonance we find evidence that the atomic layer behaves as a graded-index planar waveguide. These features are reproduced by a simple geometrical model and numerical simulations of coupled dipoles.

Publisher URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/1802.04018

DOI: arXiv:1802.04018v1

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