151 research outputs found
Alternate islands of multiple isochronous chains in wave-particle interactions
We analyze the dynamics of a relativistic particle moving in a uniform
magnetic field and perturbed by a standing electrostatic wave. We show that a
pulsed wave produces an infinite number of perturbative terms with the same
winding number, which may generate islands in the same region of phase space.
As a consequence, the number of isochronous island chains varies as a function
of the wave parameters. We observe that in all the resonances, the number of
chains is related to the amplitude of the various resonant terms. We determine
analytically the position of the periodic points and the number of island
chains as a function of the wave number and wave period. Such information is
very important when one is concerned with regular particle acceleration, since
it is necessary to adjust the initial conditions of the particle to obtain the
maximum acceleration.Comment: Submitte
Decoherence of Semiclassical Wigner Functions
The Lindblad equation governs general markovian evolution of the density
operator in an open quantum system. An expression for the rate of change of the
Wigner function as a sum of integrals is one of the forms of the Weyl
representation for this equation. The semiclassical description of the Wigner
function in terms of chords, each with its classically defined amplitude and
phase, is thus inserted in the integrals, which leads to an explicit
differential equation for the Wigner function. All the Lindblad operators are
assumed to be represented by smooth phase space functions corresponding to
classical variables. In the case that these are real, representing hermitian
operators, the semiclassical Lindblad equation can be integrated. There results
a simple extension of the unitary evolution of the semiclassical Wigner
function, which does not affect the phase of each chord contribution, while
dampening its amplitude. This decreases exponentially, as governed by the time
integral of the square difference of the Lindblad functions along the classical
trajectories of both tips of each chord. The decay of the amplitudes is shown
to imply diffusion in energy for initial states that are nearly pure.
Projecting the Wigner function onto an orthogonal position or momentum basis,
the dampening of long chords emerges as the exponential decay of off-diagonal
elements of the density matrix.Comment: 23 pg, 2 fi
Semiclassical theory for small displacements
Characteristic functions contain complete information about all the moments
of a classical distribution and the same holds for the Fourier transform of the
Wigner function: a quantum characteristic function, or the chord function.
However, knowledge of a finite number of moments does not allow for accurate
determination of the chord function. For pure states this provides the overlap
of the state with all its possible rigid translations (or displacements). We
here present a semiclassical approximation of the chord function for large
Bohr-quantized states, which is accurate right up to a caustic, beyond which
the chord function becomes evanescent. It is verified to pick out blind spots,
which are displacements for zero overlaps. These occur even for translations
within a Planck area of the origin. We derive a simple approximation for the
closest blind spots, depending on the Schroedinger covariance matrix, which is
verified for Bohr-quantized states.Comment: 16 pages, 4 figures
Semiclassical Evolution of Dissipative Markovian Systems
A semiclassical approximation for an evolving density operator, driven by a
"closed" hamiltonian operator and "open" markovian Lindblad operators, is
obtained. The theory is based on the chord function, i.e. the Fourier transform
of the Wigner function. It reduces to an exact solution of the Lindblad master
equation if the hamiltonian operator is a quadratic function and the Lindblad
operators are linear functions of positions and momenta.
Initially, the semiclassical formulae for the case of hermitian Lindblad
operators are reinterpreted in terms of a (real) double phase space, generated
by an appropriate classical double Hamiltonian. An extra "open" term is added
to the double Hamiltonian by the non-hermitian part of the Lindblad operators
in the general case of dissipative markovian evolution. The particular case of
generic hamiltonian operators, but linear dissipative Lindblad operators, is
studied in more detail. A Liouville-type equivariance still holds for the
corresponding classical evolution in double phase, but the centre subspace,
which supports the Wigner function, is compressed, along with expansion of its
conjugate subspace, which supports the chord function.
Decoherence narrows the relevant region of double phase space to the
neighborhood of a caustic for both the Wigner function and the chord function.
This difficulty is avoided by a propagator in a mixed representation, so that a
further "small-chord" approximation leads to a simple generalization of the
quadratic theory for evolving Wigner functions.Comment: 33 pages - accepted to J. Phys.
Hyperbolic Scar Patterns in Phase Space
We develop a semiclassical approximation for the spectral Wigner and Husimi
functions in the neighbourhood of a classically unstable periodic orbit of
chaotic two dimensional maps. The prediction of hyperbolic fringes for the
Wigner function, asymptotic to the stable and unstable manifolds, is verified
computationally for a (linear) cat map, after the theory is adapted to a
discrete phase space appropriate to a quantized torus. The characteristic
fringe patterns can be distinguished even for quasi-energies where the fixed
point is not Bohr-quantized. The corresponding Husimi function dampens these
fringes with a Gaussian envelope centered on the periodic point. Even though
the hyperbolic structure is then barely perceptible, more periodic points stand
out due to the weakened interference.Comment: 12 pages, 10 figures, Submited to Phys. Rev.
Isochronous island bifurcations driven by resonant magnetic perturbations in Tokamaks
Recent evidences show that heteroclinic bifurcations in magnetic islands may
be caused by the amplitude variation of resonant magnetic perturbations in
tokamaks. To investigate the onset of these bifurcations, we consider a large
aspect ratio tokamak with an ergodic limiter composed of two pairs of rings
that create external primary perturbations with two sets of wave numbers. An
individual pair produces hyperbolic and elliptic periodic points, and its
associated islands, that are consistent with the Poincar\'e-Birkhoff fixed
point theorem. However, for two pairs producing external perturbations resonant
on the same rational surface, we show that different configurations of
isochronous island chains may appear on phase space according to the amplitude
of the electric currents in each pair of the ergodic limiter. When one of the
electric currents increases, isochronous bifurcations take place and new
islands are created with the same winding number as the preceding islands. We
present examples of bifurcation sequences displaying (a) direct transitions
from the island chain configuration generated by one of the pairs to the
configuration produced by the other pair, and (b) transitions with intermediate
configurations produced by the limiter pairs coupling. Furthermore, we identify
shearless bifurcations inside some isochronous islands, originating
nonmonotonic local winding number profiles with associated shearless invariant
curves
Isochronous bifurcations in a two-parameter twist map
Isochronous islands in phase space emerge in twist Hamiltonian systems as a
response to multiple resonant perturbations. According to the
Poincar\'e-Birkhoff theorem, the number of islands depends on the system
characteristics and the perturbation. We analyze, for the two-parameter
standard map, also called two-harmonic standard map, how the island chains are
modified as the perturbation amplitude increases. We identified three routes
for the transition from one chain, associated with one harmonic, to the chain
associated with the other harmonic, based on a combination of pitchfork and
saddle-node bifurcations. These routes can present intermediate island chains
configurations. Otherwise, the destruction of the islands always occurs through
the pitchfork bifurcation
Classical orbit bifurcation and quantum interference in mesoscopic magnetoconductance
We study the magnetoconductance of electrons through a mesoscopic channel
with antidots. Through quantum interference effects, the conductance maxima as
functions of the magnetic field strength and the antidot radius (regulated by
the applied gate voltage) exhibit characteristic dislocations that have been
observed experimentally. Using the semiclassical periodic orbit theory, we
relate these dislocations directly to bifurcations of the leading classes of
periodic orbits.Comment: 4 pages, including 5 figures. Revised version with clarified
discussion and minor editorial change
Noise models for superoperators in the chord representation
We study many-qubit generalizations of quantum noise channels that can be
written as an incoherent sum of translations in phase space. Physical
description in terms of the spectral properties of the superoperator and the
action in phase space are provided. A very natural description of decoherence
leading to a preferred basis is achieved with diffusion along a phase space
line. The numerical advantages of using the chord representation are
illustrated in the case of coarse-graining noise.Comment: 8 pages, 5 .ps figures (RevTeX4). Submitted to Phys. Rev. A. minor
changes made, according to referee suggestion
Semiclassical spatial correlations in chaotic wave functions
We study the spatial autocorrelation of energy eigenfunctions corresponding to classically chaotic systems in the semiclassical regime.
Our analysis is based on the Weyl-Wigner formalism for the spectral average
of , defined as the average over eigenstates within an energy window
centered at . In this framework is the Fourier
transform in momentum space of the spectral Wigner function . Our study reveals the chord structure that
inherits from the spectral Wigner function showing the interplay between the
size of the spectral average window, and the spatial separation scale. We
discuss under which conditions is it possible to define a local system
independent regime for . In doing so, we derive an expression
that bridges the existing formulae in the literature and find expressions for
valid for any separation size .Comment: 24 pages, 3 figures, submitted to PR
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