Abstract
We have observed slow light propagation with a group velocity as low as at room temperature in a ruby crystal. A quantum coherence effect, coherent population oscillations, produces a very narrow spectral “hole” in the homogeneously broadened absorption profile of ruby. The resulting rapid spectral variation of the refractive index leads to a large value of the group index. We observe slow light propagation both for Gaussian-shaped light pulses and for amplitude modulated optical beams in a system that is much simpler than those previously used for generating slow light.
- Received 31 October 2002
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.90.113903
©2003 American Physical Society