4,471 research outputs found
Nonlinear Phenomena of Ultracold Atomic Gases in Optical Lattices: Emergence of Novel Features in Extended States
The system of a cold atomic gas in an optical lattice is governed by two
factors: nonlinearity originating from the interparticle interaction, and the
periodicity of the system set by the lattice. The high level of controllability
associated with such an arrangement allows for the study of the competition and
interplay between these two, and gives rise to a whole range of interesting and
rich nonlinear effects. This review covers the basic idea and overview of such
nonlinear phenomena, especially those corresponding to extended states. This
includes "swallowtail" loop structures of the energy band, Bloch states with
multiple periodicity, and those in "nonlinear lattices", i.e., systems with the
nonlinear interaction term itself being a periodic function in space.Comment: 39 pages, 21 figures; review article to be published in a Special
Issue of Entropy on "Non-Linear Lattice
Quantum fluctuation theorems and power measurements
Work in the paradigm of the quantum fluctuation theorems of Crooks and
Jarzynski is determined by projective measurements of energy at the beginning
and end of the force protocol. In analogy to classical systems, we consider an
alternative definition of work given by the integral of the supplied power
determined by integrating up the results of repeated measurements of the
instantaneous power during the force protocol. We observe that such a
definition of work, in spite of taking account of the process dependence, has
different possible values and statistics from the work determined by the
conventional two energy measurement approach (TEMA). In the limit of many
projective measurements of power, the system's dynamics is frozen in the power
measurement basis due to the quantum Zeno effect leading to statistics only
trivially dependent on the force protocol. In general the Jarzynski relation is
not satisfied except for the case when the instantaneous power operator
commutes with the total Hamiltonian at all times. We also consider properties
of the joint statistics of power-based definition of work and TEMA work in
protocols where both values are determined. This allows us to quantify their
correlations. Relaxing the projective measurement condition, weak continuous
measurements of power are considered within the stochastic master equation
formalism. Even in this scenario the power-based work statistics is in general
not able to reproduce qualitative features of the TEMA work statistics.Comment: 26 pages, 9 figure
Band structure loops and multistability in cavity-QED
We calculate the band structure of ultracold atoms located inside a
laser-driven optical cavity. For parameters where the atom-cavity system
exhibits bistability, the atomic band structure develops loop structures akin
to the ones predicted for Bose-Einstein condensates in ordinary (non-cavity)
optical lattices. However, in our case the nonlinearity derives from the cavity
back-action rather than from direct interatomic interactions. We find both bi-
and tri-stable regimes associated with the lowest band, and show that the
multistability we observe can be analyzed in terms of swallowtail catastrophes.
Dynamic and energetic stability of the mean-field solutions is also discussed,
and we show that the bistable solutions have, as expected, one unstable and two
stable branches. The presence of loops in the atomic band structure has
important implications for proposals concerning Bloch oscillations of atoms
inside optical cavities [Peden et al., Phys. Rev. A 80, 043803 (2009), Prasanna
Venkatesh et al., Phys. Rev. A 80, 063834 (2009)].Comment: 26 pages, 22 figure
Backaction-Driven Transport of Bloch Oscillating Atoms in Ring Cavities
We predict that an atomic Bose-Einstein condensate strongly coupled to an
intracavity optical lattice can undergo resonant tunneling and directed
transport when a constant and uniform bias force is applied. The bias force
induces Bloch oscillations, causing amplitude and phase modulation of the
lattice which resonantly modifies the site-to-site tunneling. For the right
choice of parameters a net atomic current is generated. The transport velocity
can be oriented oppositely to the bias force, with its amplitude and direction
controlled by the detuning between the pump laser and the cavity. The transport
can also be enhanced through imbalanced pumping of the two counter-propagating
running wave cavity modes. Our results add to the cold atoms quantum simulation
toolbox, with implications for quantum sensing and metrology.Comment: Published version: 5 pages, 4 figures; Supplementary Material
include
Quantum Performance of Thermal Machines over Many Cycles
The performance of quantum heat engines is generally based on the analysis of
a single cycle. We challenge this approach by showing that the total work
performed by a quantum engine need not be proportional to the number of cycles.
Furthermore, optimizing the engine over multiple cycles leads to the
identification of scenarios with a quantum enhancement. We demonstrate our
findings with a quantum Otto engine based on a two-level system as the working
substance that supplies power to an external oscillator.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures; published in Phys. Rev. Lett. as an Editors'
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