ABSTRACT

This chapter introduces a three-level atomic model and discusses two other coherent atomic phenomena; namely, coherent Raman scattering and lasing without inversion. Lasing without inversion may take place in three-level resonant atomic systems and, like super-radiance, results from atomic coherence. Super-radiation is initiated by spontaneous fluctuations of the polarization in the medium. The semiclassical method is a powerful tool that is useful for the treatment of propagation effects in super-radiance as well as in such coherent emission processes as self-induced transparency, photon echo and others. The use of the Maxwell—Bloch equations allows one to consider these phenomena in elongated systems. Fortunately, the semiclassical approach is readily applicable to low-density systems that are to gases. However, one has to exercise greater care when applying it to coherent emission in solids. In high-density systems there is a strong mixing of the field and atomic states in the vicinity of resonance.