Abstract

In the two-atom or multiatom system, the atoms can interact with each other through exchange of virtual photon. This kind of energy exchange is often referred as the dipole-dipole interaction (DDI). Here we consider this DDI system consisting of a pair of two-level atoms strongly coupled with a bimodal whispering-gallery-mode (WGM) microresonator which is driven by an external laser field. Our aim is to explore the photon correlation characteristics of the proposed architecture using realistic experimental parameter values. We compare in detail the quality of photon antibunching (i.e., the smallness of the second-order correlation function) from three involved configurations in cavity quantum electrodynamics (QED): (i) only one two-level atom, (ii) two far apart two-level atoms without DDI, and (iii) two DDI (dipole-coupled) two-level atoms are respectively coupled to the driven WGM microresonator through the evanescent field. We clearly show that the DDI between both atoms can distinctly enhance the photon antibunching even in the weak-coupling regime in configuration (iii) with feature-rich line shapes. We also find that the photon antibunching can be modulated by properly adjusting the atom-cavity coupling strength. In addition, we display that this strong photon antibunching is robust against the cooperative atomic decay. Our DDI-based cavity QED scheme may provide an alternative way to the construction of integrated on-chip single-photon sources.

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