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The propagation of light in moving media is dragged by atomic motion. The light-drag effect can be dramatically enhanced by reducing the group velocity with electro-magnetically induced transparency. We demonstrate a systematic procedure to estimate the velocity field of the moving atoms, by holographically reconstructing the complex wavefront of the slow light and to simultaneously retrieve the absorption and phase shift. This large-NA, photon-shot-noise-limited inline coherent imaging technique may assist a wide range of cold atom experiments to access phase space information with in situ and minimally destructive measurements. By faithfully expanding the imaging data from real to complex numbers, the holographic technique also paves a way toward single shot spectroscopic imaging of atomic ensembles, even in presence of atomic density fluctuations.
The interaction of light with an atomic sample containing a large number of particles gives rise to many collective (or cooperative) effects, such as multiple scattering, superradiance and subradiance, even if the atomic density is low and the incide
We discuss the prospects for enhancing absorption and scattering of light from a weakly coupled atom in a high-finesse optical cavity by adding a medium with large, positive group index of refraction. The slow-light effect is known to narrow the cavi
In this paper we show that the sensitivity of absorption imaging of ultracold atoms can be significantly improved by imaging in a standing-wave configuration. We present simulations of single-atom absorption imaging both for a travelling-wave and a s
Besides being a source of energy, light can also cool gases of atoms down to the lowest temperatures ever measured, where atomic motion almost stops. The research field of cold atoms has emerged as a multidisciplinary one, highly relevant, e.g., for
Light propagating in an optically thick sample experiences multiple scattering. It is now known that interferences alter this propagation, leading to an enhanced backscattering, a manifestation of weak localization of light in such diffuse samples. T