Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Part I Semi-classical description of matterlight interaction
- 1 The evolution of interacting quantum systems
- Complement 1A: A continuum of variable width
- Complement 1B: Transition induced by a random broadband perturbation
- 2 The semi-classical approach: atoms interacting with a classical electromagnetic field
- Complement 2A: Classical model of the atom-field interaction: the Lorentz model
- Complement 2B: Selection rules for electric dipole transitions. Applications to resonance fluorescence and optical pumping
- Complement 2C: The density matrix and the optical Bloch equations
- Complement 2D: Manipulation of atomic coherences
- Complement 2E: The photoelectric effect
- 3 Principles of lasers
- Complement 3A: The resonant Fabry–Perot cavity
- Complement 3B: The transverse modes of a laser: Gaussian beams
- Complement 3C: Laser light and incoherent light: energy density and number of photons per mode
- Complement 3D: The spectral width of a laser: the Schawlow–Townes limit
- Complement 3E: The laser as energy source
- Complement 3F: The laser as source of coherent light
- Complement 3G: Nonlinear spectroscopy
- Part II Quantum description of light and its interaction with matter
- Part III Applying both approaches
- Index
Complement 2C: The density matrix and the optical Bloch equations
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 August 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Part I Semi-classical description of matterlight interaction
- 1 The evolution of interacting quantum systems
- Complement 1A: A continuum of variable width
- Complement 1B: Transition induced by a random broadband perturbation
- 2 The semi-classical approach: atoms interacting with a classical electromagnetic field
- Complement 2A: Classical model of the atom-field interaction: the Lorentz model
- Complement 2B: Selection rules for electric dipole transitions. Applications to resonance fluorescence and optical pumping
- Complement 2C: The density matrix and the optical Bloch equations
- Complement 2D: Manipulation of atomic coherences
- Complement 2E: The photoelectric effect
- 3 Principles of lasers
- Complement 3A: The resonant Fabry–Perot cavity
- Complement 3B: The transverse modes of a laser: Gaussian beams
- Complement 3C: Laser light and incoherent light: energy density and number of photons per mode
- Complement 3D: The spectral width of a laser: the Schawlow–Townes limit
- Complement 3E: The laser as energy source
- Complement 3F: The laser as source of coherent light
- Complement 3G: Nonlinear spectroscopy
- Part II Quantum description of light and its interaction with matter
- Part III Applying both approaches
- Index
Summary
The arguments of Chapter 2, as well as of those of subsequent chapters, have as their foundation the formalism based on the state vector of a system of which the evolution is described by the Schrödinger equation. In fact, such an approach is badly suited to the case in which the coupling between an atom and its environment (for example through collisions with other atoms or spontaneous emission into formerly empty modes of the electromagnetic field) cannot be neglected. If the correlations induced by these interactions between the atom and its environment do not concern us and we are only interested in the evolution of the atom, the formalism of the density matrix must be employed. This provides a description at all times of the state of the atom, although a state vector for the atom alone cannot be defined. In this formalism the effect of the environment on the atom is accounted for by the introduction of suitable relaxation terms (Section 2C.1) in the equation of evolution of the density matrix. An important application of the density matrix is to the case of a two-level atomic system for which the relaxation terms lead to its deexcitation to a level of lower energy. We shall show that in this case the density matrix can be represented by a vector, known as the Bloch vector, which will allow us to give simple geometrical pictures of the evolution of the system.
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- Introduction to Quantum OpticsFrom the Semi-classical Approach to Quantized Light, pp. 140 - 166Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010