146 research outputs found
Moller operators and Lippmann-Schwinger equations for step-like potentials
The Moller operators and the asociated Lippman-Schwinger equations obtained
from different partitionings of the Hamiltonian for a step-like potential
barrier are worked out, compared and related.Comment: 15 pages, 1 inlined figure, iopart.cl
Sources of quantum waves
Due to the space and time dependence of the wave function in the time
dependent Schroedinger equation, different boundary conditions are possible.
The equation is usually solved as an ``initial value problem'', by fixing the
value of the wave function in all space at a given instant. We compare this
standard approach to "source boundary conditions'' that fix the wave at all
times in a given region, in particular at a point in one dimension. In contrast
to the well-known physical interpretation of the initial-value-problem
approach, the interpretation of the source approach has remained unclear, since
it introduces negative energy components, even for ``free motion'', and a
time-dependent norm. This work provides physical meaning to the source method
by finding the link with equivalent initial value problems.Comment: 12 pages, 7 inlined figures; typos correcte
A measurement-based approach to quantum arrival times
For a quantum-mechanically spread-out particle we investigate a method for
determining its arrival time at a specific location. The procedure is based on
the emission of a first photon from a two-level system moving into a
laser-illuminated region. The resulting temporal distribution is explicitly
calculated for the one-dimensional case and compared with axiomatically
proposed expressions. As a main result we show that by means of a deconvolution
one obtains the well known quantum mechanical probability flux of the particle
at the location as a limiting distribution.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Comment on "Measurement of time of arrival in quantum mechanics"
The analysis of the model quantum clocks proposed by Aharonov et al. [Phys.
Rev. A 57 (1998) 4130 - quant-ph/9709031] requires considering evanescent
components, previously ignored. We also clarify the meaning of the operational
time of arrival distribution which had been investigated.Comment: 3 inlined figures; comment on quant-ph/970903
Transient response of a quantum wave to an instantaneous potential step switching
The transient response of a stationary state of a quantum particle in a step
potential to an instantaneous change in the step height (a simplified model for
a sudden bias switch in an electronic semiconductor device) is solved exactly
by means of a semianalytical expression. The characteristic times for the
transient process up to the new stationary state are identified. A comparison
is made between the exact results and an approximate method.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figures, Revtex
Quantum times of arrival for multiparticle states
Using the concept of crossing state and the formalism of second quantization,
we propose a prescription for computing the density of arrivals of particles
for multiparticle states, both in the free and the interacting case. The
densities thus computed are positive, covariant in time for time independent
hamiltonians, normalized to the total number of arrivals, and related to the
flux. We investigate the behaviour of this prescriptions for bosons and
fermions, finding boson enhancement and fermion depletion of arrivals.Comment: 10 a4 pages, 5 inlined figure
Generalizations of Kijowski's time-of-arrival distribution for interaction potentials
Several proposals for a time-of-arrival distribution of ensembles of
independent quantum particles subject to an external interaction potential are
compared making use of the ``crossing state'' concept. It is shown that only
one of them has the properties expected for a classical distribution in the
classical limit. The comparison is illustrated numerically with a collision of
a Gaussian wave packet with an opaque square barrier.Comment: 5 inlined figures: some typo correction
Atomic time-of-arrival measurements with a laser of finite beam width
A natural approach to measure the time of arrival of an atom at a spatial
region is to illuminate this region with a laser and detect the first
fluorescence photons produced by the excitation of the atom and subsequent
decay. We investigate the actual physical content of such a measurement in
terms of atomic dynamical variables, taking into account the finite width of
the laser beam. Different operation regimes are identified, in particular the
ones in which the quantum current density may be obtained.Comment: 7 figure
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