1,506 research outputs found
Excitation transport through Rydberg dressing
We show how to create long range interactions between alkali-atoms in
different hyper-fine ground states, allowing coherent electronic quantum state
migration. The scheme uses off resonant dressing with atomic Rydberg states,
exploiting the dipole-dipole excitation transfer that is possible between
those. Actual population in the Rydberg state is kept small. Dressing offers
large advantages over the direct use of Rydberg levels: It reduces ionisation
probabilities and provides an additional tuning parameter for life-times and
interaction-strengths. We present an effective Hamiltonian for the ground-state
manifold and show that it correctly describes the full multi-state dynamics for
up to 5 atoms.Comment: 22 pages + 6 pages appendices, 8 figures, replaced with revised
version, added journal referenc
Antiblockade in Rydberg excitation of an ultracold lattice gas
It is shown that the two-step excitation scheme typically used to create an
ultracold Rydberg gas can be described with an effective two-level rate
equation, greatly reducing the complexity of the optical Bloch equations. This
allows us to solve the many-body problem of interacting cold atoms with a Monte
Carlo technique. Our results reproduce the Rydberg blockade effect. However, we
demonstrate that an Autler-Townes double peak structure in the two-step
excitation scheme, which occurs for moderate pulse lengths as used in the
experiment, can give rise to an antiblockade effect. It is observable in a
lattice gas with regularly spaced atoms. Since the antiblockade effect is
robust against a large number of lattice defects it should be experimentally
realizable with an optical lattice created by CO lasers.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figure
Newton's cradle and entanglement transport in a flexible Rydberg chain
In a regular, flexible chain of Rydberg atoms, a single electronic excitation
localizes on two atoms that are in closer mutual proximity than all others. We
show how the interplay between excitonic and atomic motion causes electronic
excitation and diatomic proximity to propagate through the Rydberg chain as a
combined pulse. In this manner entanglement is transferred adiabatically along
the chain, reminiscent of momentum transfer in Newton's cradle.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures. Revised versio
Adiabatic entanglement transport in Rydberg aggregates
We consider the interplay between excitonic and atomic motion in a regular,
flexible chain of Rydberg atoms, extending our recent results on entanglement
transport in Rydberg chains [W\"uster et al., Phys.Rev.Lett 105 053004 (2010)].
In such a Rydberg chain, similar to molecular aggregates, an electronic
excitation is delocalised due to long range dipole-dipole interactions among
the atoms. The transport of an exciton that is initially trapped by a chain
dislocation is strongly coupled to nuclear dynamics, forming a localised pulse
of combined excitation and displacement. This pulse transfers entanglement
between dislocated atoms adiabatically along the chain. Details about the
interaction and the preparation of the initial state are discussed. We also
present evidence that the quantum dynamics of this complex many-body problem
can be accurately described by selected quantum-classical methods, which
greatly simplify investigations of excitation transport in flexible chains
Many-body theory of excitation dynamics in an ultracold Rydberg gas
We develop a theoretical approach for the dynamics of Rydberg excitations in
ultracold gases, with a realistically large number of atoms. We rely on the
reduction of the single-atom Bloch equations to rate equations, which is
possible under various experimentally relevant conditions. Here, we explicitly
refer to a two-step excitation-scheme. We discuss the conditions under which
our approach is valid by comparing the results with the solution of the exact
quantum master equation for two interacting atoms. Concerning the emergence of
an excitation blockade in a Rydberg gas, our results are in qualitative
agreement with experiment. Possible sources of quantitative discrepancy are
carefully examined. Based on the two-step excitation scheme, we predict the
occurrence of an antiblockade effect and propose possible ways to detect this
excitation enhancement experimentally in an optical lattice as well as in the
gas phase.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figure
Correlations of Rydberg excitations in an ultra-cold gas after an echo sequence
We show that Rydberg states in an ultra-cold gas can be excited with strongly
preferred nearest-neighbor distance if densities are well below saturation. The
scheme makes use of an echo sequence in which the first half of a laser pulse
excites Rydberg states while the second half returns atoms to the ground state,
as in the experiment of Raitzsch et al. [Phys. Rev. Lett. 100 (2008) 013002].
Near to the end of the echo sequence, almost any remaining Rydberg atom is
separated from its next-neighbor Rydberg atom by a distance slightly larger
than the instantaneous blockade radius half-way through the pulse. These
correlations lead to large deviations of the atom counting statistics from a
Poissonian distribution. Our results are based on the exact quantum evolution
of samples with small numbers of atoms. We finally demonstrate the utility of
the omega-expansion for the approximate description of correlation dynamics
through an echo sequence.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figure
Case report: A Stauffer’s syndrome variant associated with renal cell carcinoma and thrombocytopenia
Stauffer’s syndrome is a rare paraneoplastic manifestation of renal cell carcinoma which is characterized by elevated alkaline phosphatase, erythrocyte sedimentation rate, -2-globulin, -glutamyl transferase, thrombocytosis, prolongation of prothrombin time and hepatosplenomegaly, in the absence of hepatic metastasis and jaundice. In this case report, we report a patient who was admitted with fever, fatigue, abdominal pain, weight loss and pruritus in whom renal cell carcinoma was incidentally found in the right kidney during an initial workup.KEYWORDS: Cholestasis; Paraneoplastic syndrome; RCC; Stauffer’s syndrome; Thrombocytopeni
Dynamical phases and intermittency of the dissipative quantum Ising model
We employ the concept of a dynamical, activity order parameter to study the
Ising model in a transverse magnetic field coupled to a Markovian bath. For a
certain range of values of the spin-spin coupling, magnetic field and
dissipation rate, we identify a first order dynamical phase transition between
active and inactive {\em dynamical phases}. We demonstrate that dynamical
phase-coexistence becomes manifest in an intermittent behavior of the bath
quanta emission. Moreover, we establish the connection between the dynamical
order parameter that quantifies the activity, and the longitudinal
magnetization that serves as static order parameter. The system we consider can
be implemented in current experiments with Rydberg atoms and trapped ions
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