Abstract

We calculate the reflection coefficient for a light beam incident on the interface between a dielectric and a resonant atomic vapor to first order in the dipole polarization in the vapor. The angle of incidence and the polarization direction are chosen arbitrarily, and saturation is fully accounted for. The atoms are supposed to get deexcited at collisions with the surface. The resulting transient behavior of atoms leaving the surface is responsible for a nonlocal response. This spatial dispersion near the surface is known to produce a natural-linewidth-limited resonance in the vapor reflection coefficient at normal incidence. Our analysis shows that this sub-Doppler structure is broadened by the residual Doppler effect for non-normal incidence. This structure disappears at the critical angle for total internal reflection, where one predicts a conventional Voigt-type dispersion response, based on the complex-refractive-index approach. We also calculate the saturation broadening of the atomic response for large intensities. Beyond the critical angle, the spectral response suddenly shifts from dispersion to absorption line shapes. In the case of total internal reflection, the spatial dispersion leads to an additional Lorentzian broadening, which results from an effective imaginary Doppler shift at passage through the evanescent wave (transit-time broadening).

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