Intensity fluctuation spectroscopy of small numbers of dye molecules in a microcavity
- 1 July 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physical Society (APS) in Physical Review A
- Vol. 58 (1) , 620-627
- https://doi.org/10.1103/physreva.58.620
Abstract
The spontaneous emission from a thin layer of a dilute solution of fluorescent dye molecules within an optical microcavity has been studied. Strong fluctuations in fluorescence intensity are observed when the average number of molecules in the measurement volume is small. We have performed experiments that simultaneously characterize these fluctuations over nine orders of magnitude of time, from ns to s. These measurements have identified photon antibunching characteristic of single-molecule emission, along with triplet-state shelving and diffusion driven number fluctuations. The results give fundamental information on the kinetics of dye molecules and allow one to speculate about the prospect of using single molecules as sources of single photons for quantum optics.Keywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- Single-Mode Generation of Quantum Photon States by Excited Single Molecules in a Microcavity TrapPhysical Review Letters, 1996
- Submillisecond detection of single rhodamine molecules in waterJournal of Fluorescence, 1994
- Alterations of Single Molecule Fluorescence Lifetimes in Near-Field Optical MicroscopyScience, 1994
- Single photon interference in 10 km long optical fibre interferometerElectronics Letters, 1993
- Photon antibunching in the fluorescence of a single dye molecule trapped in a solidPhysical Review Letters, 1992
- Experimental quantum cryptographyJournal of Cryptology, 1992
- Photon Antibunching in Resonance FluorescencePhysical Review Letters, 1977
- Fluorescence correlation spectroscopy. I. Conceptual basis and theoryBiopolymers, 1974
- An Electronic Correlator for Photoelectric Correlation MeasurementsReview of Scientific Instruments, 1972
- Measurements of light intensity correlations in the subnanosecond region by photomultipliersOptics Communications, 1971