3,233 research outputs found
Long-lived Quantum Coherence between Macroscopically Distinct States in Superradiance
The dephasing influence of a dissipative environment reduces linear
superpositions of macroscopically distinct quantum states (sometimes also
called Schr\"odinger cat states) usually almost immediately to a statistical
mixture. This process is called decoherence. Couplings to the environment with
a certain symmetry can lead to slow decoherence. In this Letter we show that
the collective coupling of a large number of two-level atoms to an
electromagnetic field mode in a cavity that leads to the phenomena of
superradiance has such a symmetry, at least approximately. We construct
superpositions of macroscopically distinct quantum states decohering only on a
classical time scale and propose an experiment in which the extraordinarily
slow decoherence should be observable.Comment: 4 pages of revte
Entanglement in the classical limit: quantum correlations from classical probabilities
We investigate entanglement for a composite closed system endowed with a
scaling property allowing to keep the dynamics invariant while the effective
Planck constant hbar_eff of the system is varied. Entanglement increases as
hbar_eff goes to 0. Moreover for sufficiently low hbar_eff the evolution of the
quantum correlations, encapsulated for example in the quantum discord, can be
obtained from the mutual information of the corresponding \emph{classical}
system. We show this behavior is due to the local suppression of path
interferences in the interaction that generates the entanglement. This behavior
should be generic for quantum systems in the classical limit.Comment: 10 pages 3 figure
Semiclassical spin damping: Superradiance revisited
A well known description of superradiance from pointlike collections of many
atoms involves the dissipative motion of a large spin. The pertinent
``superradiance master equation'' allows for a formally exact solution which we
subject to a semiclassical evaluation. The clue is a saddle-point approximation
for an inverse Laplace transform. All previous approximate treatments,
disparate as they may appear, are encompassed in our systematic formulation. A
byproduct is a hitherto unknown rigorous relation between coherences and
probabilities. Our results allow for generalizations to spin dynamics with
chaos in the classical limit.Comment: 12 pages standard revtex; to be published in EPJ
Classical versus Quantum Time Evolution of Densities at Limited Phase-Space Resolution
We study the interrelations between the classical (Frobenius-Perron) and the
quantum (Husimi) propagator for phase-space (quasi-)probability densities in a
Hamiltonian system displaying a mix of regular and chaotic behavior. We focus
on common resonances of these operators which we determine by blurring
phase-space resolution. We demonstrate that classical and quantum time
evolution look alike if observed with a resolution much coarser than a Planck
cell and explain how this similarity arises for the propagators as well as
their spectra. The indistinguishability of blurred quantum and classical
evolution implies that classical resonances can conveniently be determined from
quantum mechanics and in turn become effective for decay rates of quantum
correlations.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figure
Fluctuations and Ergodicity of the Form Factor of Quantum Propagators and Random Unitary Matrices
We consider the spectral form factor of random unitary matrices as well as of
Floquet matrices of kicked tops. For a typical matrix the time dependence of
the form factor looks erratic; only after a local time average over a suitably
large time window does a systematic time dependence become manifest. For
matrices drawn from the circular unitary ensemble we prove ergodicity: In the
limits of large matrix dimension and large time window the local time average
has vanishingly small ensemble fluctuations and may be identified with the
ensemble average. By numerically diagonalizing Floquet matrices of kicked tops
with a globally chaotic classical limit we find the same ergodicity. As a
byproduct we find that the traces of random matrices from the circular
ensembles behave very much like independent Gaussian random numbers. Again,
Floquet matrices of chaotic tops share that universal behavior. It becomes
clear that the form factor of chaotic dynamical systems can be fully faithful
to random-matrix theory, not only in its locally time-averaged systematic time
dependence but also in its fluctuations.Comment: 12 pages, RevTEX, 4 figures in eps forma
Overdamping by weakly coupled environments
A quantum system weakly interacting with a fast environment usually undergoes
a relaxation with complex frequencies whose imaginary parts are damping rates
quadratic in the coupling to the environment, in accord with Fermi's ``Golden
Rule''. We show for various models (spin damped by harmonic-oscillator or
random-matrix baths, quantum diffusion, quantum Brownian motion) that upon
increasing the coupling up to a critical value still small enough to allow for
weak-coupling Markovian master equations, a new relaxation regime can occur. In
that regime, complex frequencies lose their real parts such that the process
becomes overdamped. Our results call into question the standard belief that
overdamping is exclusively a strong coupling feature.Comment: 4 figures; Paper submitted to Phys. Rev.
Entanglement as a signature of quantum chaos
We explore the dynamics of entanglement in classically chaotic systems by
considering a multiqubit system that behaves collectively as a spin system
obeying the dynamics of the quantum kicked top. In the classical limit, the
kicked top exhibits both regular and chaotic dynamics depending on the strength
of the chaoticity parameter in the Hamiltonian. We show that the
entanglement of the multiqubit system, considered for both bipartite and
pairwise entanglement, yields a signature of quantum chaos. Whereas bipartite
entanglement is enhanced in the chaotic region, pairwise entanglement is
suppressed. Furthermore, we define a time-averaged entangling power and show
that this entangling power changes markedly as moves the system from
being predominantly regular to being predominantly chaotic, thus sharply
identifying the edge of chaos. When this entangling power is averaged over
initial states, it yields a signature of global chaos. The qualitative behavior
of this global entangling power is similar to that of the classical Lyapunov
exponent.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figure
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