Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Autler–Townes_effect> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 62 of
62
with 100 triples per page.
- Autler–Townes_effect abstract "In spectroscopy, the Autler–Townes effect, named after American physicists Stanley Autler and Charles Townes, is a type of the dynamical (also known as AC) Stark effect, corresponding to the case when an oscillating electric field (e.g., that of a laser) is tuned in resonance (or close) to the transition frequency of a given spectral line, and resulting in a change of the shape of the absorption/emission spectra of that spectral line.It is the AC equivalent of the Stark effect which splits the spectral lines of atoms and molecules in a constant electric field. Compared to its DC counterpart, the fields in the AC effect are typically much larger, and the effects are harder to predict.While generally referring to atomic spectral shifts due to AC fields at any (single) frequency, the effect is more pronounced when the field is tuned to the frequency of a natural two level transition. In this case, the alternating field has the effect of splitting the two bare transition states into doublets or \"dressed states\" that are separated by the Rabi frequency. This is commonly achieved by a laser tuned to (or near) the desired transition.This splitting results in a Rabi cycle or Rabi oscillation between bare states which are no longer energy eigenstates of the atom-field Hamiltonian. The resulting fluorescence spectrum of an atom is known as a Mollow triplet. The AC stark splitting is integral to several other phenomena in quantum optics, such as Electromagnetically induced transparency and Sisyphus cooling. Vacuum Rabi oscillations have also been described as manifestation of the AC Stark effect from atomic coupling to the vacuum field.".
- Autler–Townes_effect wikiPageID "6970787".
- Autler–Townes_effect wikiPageLength "12651".
- Autler–Townes_effect wikiPageOutDegree "48".
- Autler–Townes_effect wikiPageRevisionID "687734862".
- Autler–Townes_effect wikiPageWikiLink Absorption_spectroscopy.
- Autler–Townes_effect wikiPageWikiLink Alternating_current.
- Autler–Townes_effect wikiPageWikiLink Carbonyl_sulfide.
- Autler–Townes_effect wikiPageWikiLink Category:Atomic_physics.
- Autler–Townes_effect wikiPageWikiLink Category:Quantum_optics.
- Autler–Townes_effect wikiPageWikiLink Charles_H._Townes.
- Autler–Townes_effect wikiPageWikiLink Eigenvalues_and_eigenvectors.
- Autler–Townes_effect wikiPageWikiLink Electric_field.
- Autler–Townes_effect wikiPageWikiLink Electromagnetically_induced_transparency.
- Autler–Townes_effect wikiPageWikiLink Emission_spectrum.
- Autler–Townes_effect wikiPageWikiLink Fano_resonance.
- Autler–Townes_effect wikiPageWikiLink Floquet_theory.
- Autler–Townes_effect wikiPageWikiLink Fourier_series.
- Autler–Townes_effect wikiPageWikiLink Gain–bandwidth_product.
- Autler–Townes_effect wikiPageWikiLink Hamiltonian_(quantum_mechanics).
- Autler–Townes_effect wikiPageWikiLink Laser.
- Autler–Townes_effect wikiPageWikiLink Laser_detuning.
- Autler–Townes_effect wikiPageWikiLink Light_dressed_states.
- Autler–Townes_effect wikiPageWikiLink Massachusetts_Institute_of_Technology.
- Autler–Townes_effect wikiPageWikiLink Mollow_triplet.
- Autler–Townes_effect wikiPageWikiLink Quantum_computing.
- Autler–Townes_effect wikiPageWikiLink Qubit.
- Autler–Townes_effect wikiPageWikiLink Rabi_cycle.
- Autler–Townes_effect wikiPageWikiLink Rabi_frequency.
- Autler–Townes_effect wikiPageWikiLink Resonance.
- Autler–Townes_effect wikiPageWikiLink Rotating_reference_frame.
- Autler–Townes_effect wikiPageWikiLink Rotating_wave_approximation.
- Autler–Townes_effect wikiPageWikiLink Rydberg_atom.
- Autler–Townes_effect wikiPageWikiLink Schrödinger_equation.
- Autler–Townes_effect wikiPageWikiLink Semiclassical_physics.
- Autler–Townes_effect wikiPageWikiLink Spectral_line.
- Autler–Townes_effect wikiPageWikiLink Spectroscopy.
- Autler–Townes_effect wikiPageWikiLink Stanley_Autler.
- Autler–Townes_effect wikiPageWikiLink Stark_effect.
- Autler–Townes_effect wikiPageWikiLink Stark_spectroscopy.
- Autler–Townes_effect wikiPageWikiLink Time-resolved_spectroscopy.
- Autler–Townes_effect wikiPageWikiLink Vector_potential.
- Autler–Townes_effect wikiPageWikiLinkText "AC Stark shift".
- Autler–Townes_effect wikiPageWikiLinkText "Autler–Townes effect".
- Autler–Townes_effect wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Cite_journal.
- Autler–Townes_effect wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Expert-subject.
- Autler–Townes_effect wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Main.
- Autler–Townes_effect wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Autler–Townes_effect subject Category:Atomic_physics.
- Autler–Townes_effect subject Category:Quantum_optics.
- Autler–Townes_effect hypernym Type.
- Autler–Townes_effect type Mechanic.
- Autler–Townes_effect type Physic.
- Autler–Townes_effect type Redirect.
- Autler–Townes_effect comment "In spectroscopy, the Autler–Townes effect, named after American physicists Stanley Autler and Charles Townes, is a type of the dynamical (also known as AC) Stark effect, corresponding to the case when an oscillating electric field (e.g., that of a laser) is tuned in resonance (or close) to the transition frequency of a given spectral line, and resulting in a change of the shape of the absorption/emission spectra of that spectral line.It is the AC equivalent of the Stark effect which splits the spectral lines of atoms and molecules in a constant electric field. ".
- Autler–Townes_effect label "Autler–Townes effect".
- Autler–Townes_effect sameAs Q4826024.
- Autler–Townes_effect sameAs اثر_آتلر-تانز.
- Autler–Townes_effect sameAs m.0gz9ww.
- Autler–Townes_effect sameAs Q4826024.
- Autler–Townes_effect wasDerivedFrom Autler–Townes_effect?oldid=687734862.
- Autler–Townes_effect isPrimaryTopicOf Autler–Townes_effect.