2,620 research outputs found
Heating rates for an atom in a far-detuned optical lattice
We calculate single atom heating rates in a far detuned optical lattice, in
connection with recent experiments. We first derive a master equation,
including a realistic atomic internal structure and a quantum treatment of the
atomic motion in the lattice. The experimental feature that optical lattices
are obtained by superimposing laser standing waves of different frequencies is
also included, which leads to a micromotional correction to the light shift
that we evaluate. We then calculate, and compare to experimental results, two
heating rates, the "total" heating rate (corresponding to the increase of the
total mechanical energy of the atom in the lattice), and the ground bande
heating rate (corresponding to the increase of energy within the ground energy
band of the lattice).Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures, 1 tabl
Decays in Quantum Hierarchical Models
We study the dynamics of a simple model for quantum decay, where a single
state is coupled to a set of discrete states, the pseudo continuum, each
coupled to a real continuum of states. We find that for constant matrix
elements between the single state and the pseudo continuum the decay occurs via
one state in a certain region of the parameters, involving the Dicke and
quantum Zeno effects. When the matrix elements are random several cases are
identified. For a pseudo continuum with small bandwidth there are weakly damped
oscillations in the probability to be in the initial single state. For
intermediate bandwidth one finds mesoscopic fluctuations in the probability
with amplitude inversely proportional to the square root of the volume of the
pseudo continuum space. They last for a long time compared to the non-random
case
Nonlinear Faraday Rotation and Superposition-State Detection in Cold Atoms
We report on the first observation of nonlinear Faraday rotation with cold
atoms at a temperature of ~100 uK. The observed nonlinear rotation of the light
polarization plane is up to 0.1 rad over the 1 mm size atomic cloud in
approximately 10 mG magnetic field. The nonlinearity of rotation results from
long-lived coherence of ground-state Zeeman sublevels created by a
near-resonant light. The method allows for creation, detection and control of
atomic superposition states. It also allows applications for precision
magnetometry with high spatial and temporal resolution.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figure
Entanglement swapping between spacelike separated atoms
We show a mechanism that projects a pair of neutral two-level atoms from an
initially uncorrelated state to a maximally entangled state while they remain
spacelike separated. The atoms begin both excited in a common electromagnetic
vacuum, and the radiation is collected with a partial Bell-state analyzer. If
the interaction time is short enough and a certain two-photon Bell state is
detected after the interaction, a high degree of entanglement, even maximal,
can be generated while one atom is outside the light cone of the other, for
arbitrary large interatomic distances.Comment: v2: version accepted in Phys. Rev.
Resonances for a Hydrogenic System or a Harmonic Oscillator Strongly Coupled to a Field
We calculate resonances which are formed by a particle in a potential which
is either Coulombian or quadratic when the particle is strongly coupled to a
massless boson, taking only two energy levels into consideration. From these
calculations we derive how the moving away of the particle from its attraction
center goes together with the energy lowering of hybrid states that this
particle forms with the field. We study the width of these states and we show
that stable states may also appear in the coupling.Comment: 17 pages, 6 figure
Equivalence of two mathematical forms for the bound angular momentum of the electromagnetic field
It is shown that the mathematical form, obtained in a recent paper, for the
angular momentum of the electromagnetic field in the vicinity of electric
charge is equivalent to another form obtained previously by Cohen-Tannoudji,
Dupont-Roc and Gilbert. In this version of the paper an improved derivation is
given.Comment: 4 pages pdf, simpler derivatio
On the consequences of the fact that atomic levels have a certain width
This note presents two ideas. The first one is that quantum theory has a
fundamentally perturbative basis but leads to nonperturbative states which it
would seem natural to take into account in the foundation of a theory of
quantum phenomena. The second one consists in questioning the validity of the
present notion of time. Both matters are related to the fact that atomic levels
have a certain width. This note is presented qualitatively so as to evidence
its main points, independently of the models on which these have been tested.Comment: 8 page
Absorption and emission spectroscopies of homogeneous and inhomogeneously broadened multilevel systems in strong light fields
A method is introduced to calc., for a model set of mol. levels, the spectral line shapes expected for a variety of conventional laser expts. including absorption, hole burning, fluorescence line narrowing, and Raman scattering. The method allows the incident laser field to have arbitrary intensity. Furthermore, the effects of model gaussian or lorenzian inhomogeneous distributions are readily incorporated. Earlier results for a 2-level system are easily obtained and new results are presented for inhomogeneously broadened 2- and 3-level systems, and for the effects of pure dephasing on the strong field spectra. The differences between fluorescence and Raman in strong fields, and the effect of strong fields on the spontaneous emission of inhomogeneously broadened transitions were described. Some predictions are made regarding line narrowing expts. in the strong-field limit
Measurement of the ac Stark shift with a guided matter-wave interferometer
We demonstrate the effectiveness of a guided-wave Bose-Einstein condensate
interferometer for practical measurements. Taking advantage of the large arm
separations obtainable in our interferometer, the energy levels of the 87Rb
atoms in one arm of the interferometer are shifted by a calibrated laser beam.
The resulting phase shifts are used to determine the ac polarizability at a
range of frequencies near and at the atomic resonance. The measured values are
in good agreement with theoretical expectations. However, we observe a
broadening of the transition near the resonance, an indication of collective
light scattering effects. This nonlinearity may prove useful for the production
and control of squeezed quantum states.Comment: 5 pages, three figure
Spin dynamics of current driven single magnetic adatoms and molecules
A scanning tunneling microscope can probe the inelastic spin excitations of a
single magnetic atom in a surface via spin-flip assisted tunneling in which
transport electrons exchange spin and energy with the atomic spin. If the
inelastic transport time, defined as the average time elapsed between two
inelastic spin flip events, is shorter than the atom spin relaxation time, the
STM current can drive the spin out of equilibrium. Here we model this process
using rate equations and a model Hamiltonian that describes successfully spin
flip assisted tunneling experiments, including a single Mn atom, a Mn dimer and
Fe Phthalocyanine molecules. When the STM current is not spin polarized, the
non-equilibrium spin dynamics of the magnetic atom results in non-monotonic
curves. In the case of spin polarized STM current, the spin orientation
of the magnetic atom can be controlled parallel or anti-parallel to the
magnetic moment of the tip. Thus, spin polarized STM tips can be used both to
probe and to control the magnetic moment of a single atom.Comment: 15 pages, 12 figure
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