That a single atom can produce squeezed light has been predicted almost 30 years ago by Walls and Zoller. However, it has been foreseen by Mandel in 1982 that the squeezing generated by one atom would be “at least an order of magnitude more difficult” to observe than antibunching. Despite experimental efforts, single-atom squeezing has escaped observation.
We observe squeezed near-infrared light generated by a single neutral atom trapped inside a high-finesse optical cavity. With an excitation beam containing on average only 2 photons per system’s lifetime, the measured field quadratures clearly present a phase-dependent nonclassical response. I will discuss the history on the theory of squeezing as well as the experimental results for an audience knowing only basics on quantum theory.