In this work we shall study the interaction of matter and light. In so doing we shall rely heavily on the description of such processes provided by quantum mechanics. This appears on a number of levels: firstly, a quantum description of matter is indispensable if one wants to understand on the microscopic scale the different kinds of interaction processes that can occur. Secondly, a quantum description of light often turns out to be useful, sometimes necessary, to better understand these processes. We shall study phenomena such as spontaneous emission, which can only be properly treated by a theory taking into account the quantum nature of both light and matter.
In the following chapters we shall address, amongst others, the following question: ‘given an atom prepared at a given time in a particular state and subjected from this time onwards to electromagnetic radiation, what is the state of the atom and radiation at any later moment in time?’ In order to be able to answer this question it will be necessary for us to know how to calculate the evolution of a quantum system in a small number of typical situations. These methods we shall demonstrate in the first chapter.
The evolution of the coupled atom–light system depends on the temporal dependence of the applied light field, which could, for example, be applied from a given moment and thereafter remain unchanged in intensity, or, perhaps, be appreciable only for a finite period of time (pulsed excitation).
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