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The magneto-optical polarization rotation effect has prolific applications in various research areas spanning the scientific spectrum including space and interstellar research, nano-technology and material science, biomedical imaging, and sub-atomic particle research. In nonlinear magneto-optical rotation (NMOR), the intensity of a linearly-polarized probe field affects the rotation of its own polarization plane while propagating in a magnetized medium. However, typical NMOR signals of conventional single-beam $Lambda-$scheme atomic magnetometers are peculiarly small, requiring sophisticated magnetic shielding under complex operational conditions. Here, we show the presence of an energy-symmetry blockade that undermines the NMOR effect in conventional single-beam $Lambda-$scheme atomic magnetometers. We further demonstrate, both experimentally and theoretically, an inelastic wave-mixing technique that breaks this NMOR blockade, resulting in more than five orders of magnitude ($>$300,000-fold) NMOR optical signal power spectral density enhancement never before seen with conventional single-beam $Lambda-$scheme atomic magnetometers. This new technique, demonstrated with substantially reduced light intensities, may lead to many applications, especially in the field of bio-magnetism and high-resolution low-field magnetic imaging.
We present experimental and numerical studies of nonlinear magneto-optical rotation (NMOR) in rubidium vapor excited with resonant light tuned to the $5^2!S_{1/2}rightarrow 6^2!P_{1/2}$ absorption line (421~nm). Contrary to the experiments performed
Refined infrared magnetotransmission experiments have been performed in magnetic fields B up to 35 T on a series of multilayer epitaxial graphene samples. Following the main optical transition involving the n=0 Landau level (LL), we observe a new abs
We propose a method to break the chiral symmetry of light in traveling wave resonators by coupling the optical modes to a lossy channel. Through the engineered dissipation, an indirect dissipative coupling between two oppositely propagating modes can
Spontaneous symmetry breaking is central to our understanding of physics and explains many natural phenomena, from cosmic scales to subatomic particles. Its use for applications requires devices with a high level of symmetry, but engineered systems a
Dissipative solitons are self-localised structures that can persist indefinitely in open systems characterised by continual exchange of energy and/or matter with the environment. They play a key role in photonics, underpinning technologies from mode-