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Rabi cycle

The Rabi cycle is a term that originated in the field of quantum optics, but has recently found applications in the field of quantum computing.

When an atom (or some other two-level system) is illuminated by a coherent beam of photons, it will cyclically absorb photons and re-emit them by stimulated emission. One such cycle is called a Rabi cycle and the inverse of its duration the Rabi frequency of the photon beam.

This mechanism is fundamental to quantum optics. It can be modelled using the Jaynes-Cummings model and the Bloch vector formalism.

For example, in a two-state atom (an atom in which an electron can either be in the excited or ground state), the probability of finding the atom in the excited state is found from the Bloch equations to be: | cb(t) | 2 = cos(ωt)2 where ω is the Rabi frequency.

More generally, one can consider a system where the two levels under consideration are not energy eigenstates. Therefore if the system is initialized in one of these levels, time evolution will make the population of each of the levels oscillate with some characteristic frequency, which is also known as the Rabi frequency.

The name is in reference to Isidor Isaac Rabi.

Last updated: 10-19-2005 07:24:10
10-26-2009 08:16:03
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