Abstract
Atomic beams are powerful tools for measuring fundamental physical constants, probing atomic interactions, and developing precision metrology techniques such as atomic clocks and interferometry. However, most atomic-beam devices are bulky, which limits their miniaturization. Recent efforts toward the miniaturization of atomic beams have been reported (see, Ref. [10]). Here, we demonstrate an alternative approach, showing that micrometer-scale vapor cells can emulate atomic-beam behavior through geometry-dependent velocity filtering. Specifically, in a 5-µm-thick rubidium vapor cell, coherence is preserved for atoms moving parallel to the cell walls, enabling observation of the Faraday–Ramsey effect in the absence of buffer gas or anti-relaxation coatings. Using a spatially displaced pump–probe scheme and magnetic-field scanning, we observe distinct Ramsey fringes in excellent agreement with the theoretical model. This technique enables compact implementations of Faraday–Ramsey measurements in microfabricated alkali-vapor cells.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | e02129 |
| Journal | Laser and Photonics Reviews |
| Volume | 20 |
| Issue number | 10 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - 22 May 2026 |
| Externally published | Yes |
Keywords
- Faraday–Ramsey spectroscopy
- atomic-beam analogy
- chip-scale quantum sensors
- microscale alkali vapor cells
- nonlinear Faraday effect
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