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Dive into the research topics where Simone Bux is active.

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Featured researches published by Simone Bux.


Physical Review Letters | 2010

Observation of a Cooperative Radiation Force in the Presence of Disorder

Tom Bienaimé; Simone Bux; Eleonora Lucioni; Philippe W. Courteille; N. Piovella; Robin Kaiser

Cooperative scattering of light by an extended object such as an atomic ensemble or a dielectric sphere is fundamentally different from scattering from many pointlike scatterers such as single atoms. Homogeneous distributions tend to scatter cooperatively, whereas fluctuations of the density distribution increase the disorder and suppress cooperativity. In an atomic cloud, the amount of disorder can be tuned via the optical thickness, and its role can be studied via the radiation force exerted by the light on the atomic cloud. Monitoring cold (87)Rb atoms released from a magneto-optical trap, we present the first experimental signatures of radiation force reduction due to cooperative scattering. The results are in agreement with an analytical expression interpolating between the disorder and the cooperativity-dominated regimes.We show that static and oscillating photon bubbles can be excited by diffused light in the laser cooled matter confined in a magneto-optical trap (MOT). The bubble instability is due to the coupling between the radiation field and the mean field oscillations of the ultra-cold gas, and it can provide a source for low frequency turbulence. We consider a diffusion dominated regime, which can be described by a radiation transport equation, coupled with the mean field equations for the cold atom gas. A perturbative analysis shows the occurrence of two different regimes with either oscillating or purely growing bubbles. This work could also be useful to understand similar processes in astrophysics.


European Physical Journal D | 2010

Modification of radiation pressure due to cooperative scattering of light

Philippe W. Courteille; Simone Bux; Eleonora Lucioni; Katharina Lauber; Tom Bienaimé; Robin Kaiser; N. Piovella

Cooperative spontaneous emission of a single photon from a cloud of N atoms modifies substantially the radiation pressure exerted by a far-detuned laser beam exciting the atoms. On one hand, the force induced by photon absorption depends on the collective decay rate of the excited atomic state. On the other hand, directional spontaneous emission counteracts the recoil induced by the absorption. We derive an analytical expression for the radiation pressure in steady-state. For a smooth extended atomic distribution we show that the radiation pressure depends on the atom number via cooperative scattering and that, for certain atom numbers, it can be suppressed or enhanced. Cooperative scattering of light by extended atomic clouds can become important in the presence of quasi-resonant light and could be addressed in many cold atoms experiments.


Physical Review A | 2007

Cavity-enhanced superradiant Rayleigh scattering with ultracold and Bose-Einstein condensed atoms

Sebastian Slama; Gordon Krenz; Simone Bux; C. Zimmermann; Philippe W. Courteille

We report on the observation of collective atomic recoil lasing and superradiant Rayleigh scattering with ultracold and Bose-Einstein condensed atoms in an optical ring cavity. Both phenomena are based on instabilities evoked by the collective interaction of light with cold atomic gases. This publication clarifies the link between the two effects. The observation of superradiant behavior with thermal clouds as hot as several tens of {mu}K proves that the phenomena are driven by the cooperative dynamics of the atoms, which is strongly enhanced by the presence of the ring cavity.


Journal of Modern Optics | 2010

Cooperative scattering by cold atoms

Simone Bux; E. Lucioni; Helmar Bender; T. Bienaime; K. Lauber; Christian Stehle; C. Zimmermann; Sebastian Slama; Philippe W. Courteille; N. Piovella; Robin Kaiser

We have studied the interplay between disorder and cooperative scattering for the single scattering limit in the presence of a driving laser. Analytical results have been derived and we have observed cooperative scattering effects in a variety of experiments, ranging from thermal atoms in an optical dipole trap, atoms released from a dark MOT and atoms in a BEC, consistent with our theoretical predictions.


Applied Physics B | 2007

Controlling mode locking in optical ring cavities

Gordon Krenz; Simone Bux; Sebastian Slama; C. Zimmermann; Ph. W. Courteille

Imperfections in the surface of intracavity elements of an optical ring resonator can scatter light from one mode into the counterpropagating mode. The phase-locking of the cavity modes induced by this backscattering is a well-known example that notoriously afflicts laser gyroscopes and similar active systems. We experimentally show how backscattering can be circumvented in a unidirectionally operated ring cavity either by an appropriate choice of the resonant cavity mode or by active feedback control.


Physical Review Letters | 2011

Cavity-controlled collective scattering at the recoil limit.

Simone Bux; Christine Gnahm; Reinhardt A. W. Maier; C. Zimmermann; Philippe W. Courteille

We study collective scattering with Bose-Einstein condensates interacting with a high-finesse ring cavity. The condensate scatters the light of a transverse pump beam superradiantly into modes which, in contrast to previous experiments, are not determined by the geometrical shape of the condensate, but specified by a resonant cavity mode. Moreover, since the recoil-shifted frequency of the scattered light depends on the initial momentum of the scattered fraction of the condensate, we show that it is possible to employ the good resolution of the cavity as a filter selecting particular quantized momentum states.


arXiv: Pattern Formation and Solitons | 2008

Collective Atomic Recoil Lasing and Superradiant Rayleigh Scattering in a high‐Q ring cavity

Sebastian Slama; Gordon Krenz; Simone Bux; C. Zimmermann; Philippe W. Courteille

Cold atoms in optical high‐Q cavities are an ideal model system for long‐range interacting particles. The position of two arbitrary atoms is, independent on their distance, coupled by the back‐scattering of photons within the cavity. This mutual coupling can lead to collective instability and self‐organization of a cloud of cold atoms interacting with the cavity fields. This phenomenon (CARL, i.e. Collective Atomic Recoil Lasing) has been discussed theoretically for years, but was observed only recently in our lab. The CARL‐effect is closely linked to superradiant Rayleigh scattering, which has been intensely studied with Bose‐Einstein condensates in free space. By adding a resonator the coherence time of the system, in which the instability occurs, can be strongly enhanced. This enables us to observe cavity‐enhanced superradiance with both Bose‐Einstein condensates and thermal clouds and allows us to close the discussion about the role of quantum statistics in superradiant scattering.


Applied Physics B | 2007

Ultra-cold atoms in an optical cavity: two-mode laser locking to the cavity avoiding radiation pressure

Simone Bux; Gordon Krenz; Sebastian Slama; C. Zimmermann; Philippe W. Courteille

The combination of ultra-cold atomic clouds with the light fields of optical cavities provides a powerful model system for the development of new types of laser cooling and for studying cooperative phenomena. These experiments critically depend on the precise tuning of an incident pump laser with respect to a cavity resonance. Here, we present a simple and reliable experimental tuning scheme based on a two-mode laser spectrometer. The scheme uses a first laser for probing higher-order transversal modes of the cavity having an intensity minimum near the cavity’s optical axis, where the atoms are confined by a magnetic trap. In this way the cavity resonance is observed without exposing the atoms to unwanted radiation pressure. A second laser, which is phase locked to the first and tuned close to a fundamental cavity mode, drives the coherent atom-field dynamics.


Physical Review Letters | 2007

Superradiant rayleigh scattering and collective atomic recoil lasing in a ring cavity

Sebastian Slama; Simone Bux; Gordon Krenz; C. Zimmermann; Ph. W. Courteille


Physical Review A | 2013

Control of matter-wave superradiance with a high-finesse ring cavity

Simone Bux; H. Tomczyk; D. Schmidt; Ph. W. Courteille; N. Piovella; C. Zimmermann

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Gordon Krenz

University of Tübingen

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Eleonora Lucioni

University of Nice Sophia Antipolis

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Tom Bienaimé

University of Nice Sophia Antipolis

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Robin Kaiser

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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