179 research outputs found
Low-temperature quantum fluctuations in overdamped ratchets
At low temperatures and strong friction the time evolution of the density
distribution in position follows a quantum Smoluchowski equation. Recently,
also higher-order contributions of quantum fluctuations to drift and diffusion
coefficients have been systematically derived. As a non-trivial situation to
reveal the impact of subleading quantum corrections and to demonstrate
convergence properties of the perturbation series, directed transport in
ratchets is studied. It is shown that the perturbation series typically has a
non-monotonous behavior. Depending on symmetry properties higher order
contributions may even compensate current reversals induced by leading quantum
fluctuations. This analysis demonstrates how to consistently treat the dynamics
of overdamped quantum systems at low temperatures also in numerical
applications.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Solving quantum master equations in phase space by continued-fraction methods
Inspired on the continued-fraction technique to solve the classical
Fokker--Planck equation, we develop continued-fraction methods to solve quantum
master equations in phase space (Wigner representation of the density matrix).
The approach allows to study several classes of nonlinear quantum systems
subjected to environmental effects (fluctuations and dissipation), with the
only limitations that the starting master equations may have. We illustrate the
method with the canonical problem of quantum Brownian motion in periodic
potentials.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figure
Low temperature electron transfer in strongly condensed phase
Electron transfer coupled to a collective vibronic degree of freedom is
studied in strongly condensed phase and at lower temperatures where quantum
fluctuations are essential. Based on an exact representation of the reduced
density matrix of the electronic+reaction coordinate compound in terms of path
integrals, recent findings on the overdamped limit in quantum dissipative
systems are employed. This allows to give for the first time a consistent
generalization of the well-known Zusman equations to the quantum domain.
Detailed conditions for the range of validity are specified. Using the Wigner
transform these results are also extended to the quantum dynamics in full phase
space. As an important application electronic transfer rates are derived that
comprise adiabatic and nonadiabatic processes in the low temperature regime
including nuclear tunneling. Accurate agreement with precise quantum Monte
Carlo data is observed.Comment: 16 pages, 6 figures, revised version with minor change
Adiabatically steered open quantum systems: Master equation and optimal phase
We introduce an alternative way to derive the generalized form of the master
equation recently presented by J. P. Pekola et al. [Phys. Rev. Lett. 105,
030401 (2010)] for an adiabatically steered two-level quantum system
interacting with a Markovian environment. The original derivation employed the
effective Hamiltonian in the adiabatic basis with the standard interaction
picture approach but without the usual secular approximation. Our approach is
based on utilizing a master equation for a non-steered system in the first
super-adiabatic basis. It is potentially efficient in obtaining higher-order
equations. Furthermore, we show how to select the phases of the adiabatic
eigenstates to minimize the local adiabatic parameter and how this selection
leads to states which are invariant under a local gauge change. We also discuss
the effects of the adiabatic noncyclic geometric phase on the master equation.Comment: 8 pages, no figures, final versio
Semiclassical time evolution of the density matrix and tunneling
The time dependent density matrix of a system with potential barrier is
studied using path integrals. The characterization of the initial state, which
is assumed to be restricted to one side of the barrier, and the time evolution
of the density matrix lead to a three-fold path integral which is evaluated in
the semiclassical limit. The semiclassical trajectories are found to move in
the complex coordinate plane and barrier penetration only arises due to
fluctuations. Both the form of the semiclassical paths and the relevant
fluctuations change significantly as a function of temperature. The
semiclassical analysis leads to a detailed picture of barrier penetration in
the real time domain and the changeover from thermal activation to quantum
tunneling. Deep tunneling is associated with quasi-zero modes in the
fluctuation spectrum about the semiclassical orbits in the long time limit. The
connection between this real time description of tunneling and the standard
imaginary time instanton approach is established. Specific results are given
for a double well potential and an Eckart barrier.Comment: 27 pages, 8 figures, to be published in Phys. Rev.
Quantum decay rates for driven barrier potentials in the strong friction limit
Quantum decay rates for barrier potentials driven by external stochastic and
periodic forces in the strong damping regime are studied. Based on the recently
derived quantum Smoluchowski equation [Phys. Rev. Lett. {\bf 87}, 086802
(2001)] explicit analytical and numerical results are presented for the case of
the resonant activation phenomenon in a bistable potential and the escape from
a metastablwell with oscillating barrier, respectively. The significant impact
of quantum fluctuations is revealed.Comment: Rapid Communication, Phys. Rev. E, in pres
Quantum Smoluchowski equation: A systematic study
The strong friction regime at low temperatures is analyzed systematically
starting from the formally exact path integral expression for the reduced
dynamics. This quantum Smoluchowski regime allows for a type of semiclassical
treatment in the inverse friction strength so that higher order quantum
corrections to the original quantum Smoluchowski equation [PRL 87, 086802
(2001), PRL 101, 11903 (2008)] can be derived. Drift and diffusion coefficients
are determined by the equilibrium distribution in position and are directly
related to the corresponding action of extremal paths and fluctuations around
them. It is shown that the inclusion of higher order corrections reproduces the
quantum enhancement above crossover for the decay rate out of a metastable well
exactly.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figure
Resonators coupled to voltage-biased Josephson junctions: From linear response to strongly driven nonlinear oscillations
Motivated by recent experiments, where a voltage biased Josephson junction is
placed in series with a resonator, the classical dynamics of the circuit is
studied in various domains of parameter space. This problem can be mapped onto
the dissipative motion of a single degree of freedom in a nonlinear
time-dependent potential, where in contrast to conventional settings the
nonlinearity appears in the driving while the static potential is purely
harmonic. For long times the system approaches steady states which are analyzed
in the underdamped regime over the full range of driving parameters including
the fundamental resonance as well as higher and sub-harmonics. Observables such
as the dc-Josephson current and the radiated microwave power give direct
information about the underlying dynamics covering phenomena as bifurcations,
irregular motion, up- and down conversion. Due to their tunability, present and
future set-ups provide versatile platforms to explore the changeover from
linear response to strongly nonlinear behavior in driven dissipative systems
under well defined conditions.Comment: 12 pages, 11 figure
Phase space dynamics of overdamped quantum systems
The phase space dynamics of dissipative quantum systems in strongly condensed
phase is considered. Based on the exact path integral approach it is shown that
the Wigner transform of the reduced density matrix obeys a time evolution
equation of Fokker-Planck type valid from high down to very low temperatures.
The effect of quantum fluctuations is discussed and the accuracy of these
findings is tested against exact data for a harmonic system.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figures, to appear in Euro. Phys. Let
- …