The Rabi method A simplified version of the Rabi method consists of a beam of atoms, all having the same speed v and the same direction, sent through one interaction zone of length L. The atoms are two-level atoms with a transition energy of \hbar\omega_0 (this is defined by applying a field \mathbf{B}_{\|} in an excitation direction \hat{z}, and thus \omega_0 = \gamma|\mathbf{B}_{\|}|, the
Larmor frequency), and with an interaction time of \tau = L/v in the interaction zone. In the interaction zone, a monochromatic oscillating magnetic field \mathbf{B}_{\perp}\cos(\omega t) is applied perpendicular to the excitation direction, and this will lead to
Rabi oscillations between and at a frequency of \Omega_{\perp} = \gamma|\mathbf{B}_{\perp}|. The Hamiltonian in the rotating frame (including the
rotating-wave approximation) is : \hat{H} = -\frac{\hbar\Delta}{2}\hat{\sigma_z} + \frac{\hbar\Omega_{\perp}}{2}\hat{\sigma_x}. The probability of transition from and can be found from this Hamiltonian and is : P(\Delta,v,L,\Omega_\perp) = \frac{1}{1 + \left(\frac{\Delta}{\Omega_\perp}\right)^2}\sin^2\left(\frac{L}{2v}\sqrt{\Omega_\perp^2 + \Delta^2}\right). This probability will be at its maximum when \Omega_{\perp}\tau = \pi. The line width \delta of this P(\Delta,\Omega_\perp) vs. \Delta/\Omega_\perp determines the precision of the measurement. Because \delta \sim \Omega_\perp \sim \pi/\tau \sim \pi v/L, by increasing \tau or L, and correspondingly decreasing \Omega_\perp so that their product is \pi, the precision of the measurement increases; i.e. the peak of the graph becomes narrower. In reality, however, inhomogeneities such as the atoms having a distribution of velocities or there being an inhomogeneous \mathbf{B}_\perp will cause the line shape to broaden and lead to decreased precision. Having a distribution of velocities means having a distribution of interaction times, and therefore there would be many angles through which state vectors would flip on the
Bloch sphere. There would be an optimal length in the Rabi setup that would give the greatest precision, but it would not be possible to increase the length L infinitely and expect ever increasing precision, as was the case in the perfect, simple Rabi model.
Ramsey method Ramsey improved upon Rabi's method by splitting the one interaction zone into two very short interaction zones, each applying a \pi/2 pulse. The two interaction zones are separated by a much longer non-interaction zone. By making the two interaction zones very short, the atoms spend a much shorter time in the presence of the external electromagnetic fields than they would in the Rabi model. This is advantageous because the longer the atoms are in the interaction zone, the more inhomogeneities (such as an inhomogeneous field) lead to reduced precision in determining \Delta. The non-interaction zone in Ramsey's model can be made much longer than the one interaction zone in Rabi's method because there is no perpendicular field \mathbf{B}_{\perp} being applied in the non-interaction zone (although there is still {{nowrap|\mathbf{B}_{\|}).}} The primary improvement from the Ramsey method is because the main peak resonance frequency represents an average over the frequencies (and inhomogeneities) in the non-interaction region between the cavities, whereas with the Rabi method the inhomogeneities in the interaction region lead to line broadening. An additional advantage of the Ramsey method for microwave or optical transitions is that the non-interaction region can be made much longer than an interaction region with the Rabi method, resulting in narrower lines. The Hamiltonian in the rotating frame for the two interaction zones is the same for that of the Rabi method, and in the non-interaction zone the Hamiltonian is only the \hat{\sigma_z} term. First a \pi/2 pulse is applied to atoms in the ground state, whereupon the atoms reach the non-interaction zone, and the spins precess about the
z axis for time T. Another \pi/2 pulse is applied, and the probability measured—practically this experiment must be done many times, because one measurement will not be enough to determine the probability of measuring any value (see the Bloch sphere description below). By applying this evolution to atoms of one velocity, the probability to find the atom in the excited state as a function of the detuning and time of flight T in the non-interaction zone is (taking |\Delta| \ll \Omega_{\perp} here) : P(T,\Delta) = \cos^2\left(\frac{\Delta T}{2}\right) = \cos^2\left(\frac{\Delta L}{2v}\right). This probability function describes the well-known
Ramsey fringes. If there is a distribution of velocities and a "hard pulse" \left(|\Delta| \ll \Omega_{\perp}\right) is applied in the interaction zones so that all of the spins of the atoms are rotated \pi/2 on the Bloch sphere regardless of whether or not they all were excited to exactly the same resonance frequency, the Ramsey fringes will look very similar to those discussed above. If a hard pulse is not applied, then the variation in interaction times must be taken into account. What results are Ramsey fringes in an envelope in the shape of the Rabi method probability for atoms of one velocity. The line width \delta of the fringes in this case is what determines the precision with which \Delta can be determined and is : \delta \sim \frac{1}{T} \sim \frac{v}{L}. By increasing the time of flight T in the non-interaction zone, or equivalently increasing the length L of the non-interaction zone, the line width can be substantially improved, by a factor of 10 or more, over that of other methods. Because Ramsey's model allows a longer observation time, one can more precisely determine \omega_0. This is a statement of the time-energy uncertainty principle: the larger the uncertainty in the time domain, the smaller the uncertainty in the energy domain, or equivalently the
frequency domain. Thought of another way, if two waves of almost exactly the same frequency are superimposed upon each other, then it will be impossible to distinguish them if the resolution of our eyes is larger than the difference between the two waves. Only after a long period of time will the difference between two waves become large enough to differentiate the two. Early Ramsey interferometers used two interaction zones separated in space, but it is also possible to use two pulses separated in time, as long as the pulses are coherent. In the case of time-separated pulses, the longer the time between pulses, the more precise the measurement. == Applications ==