239 research outputs found
Opacity of electromagnetically induced transparency for quantum fluctuations
We analyze the propagation of a pair of quantized fields inside a medium of
three-level atoms in configuration. We calculate the stationary
quadrature noise spectrum of the field after propagating through the medium, in
the case where the probe field is in a squeezed state and the atoms show
electromagnetically induced transparency (EIT). We find an oscillatory transfer
of the initial quantum properties between the probe and pump fields which is
most strongly pronounced when both fields have comparable Rabi frequencies.
This implies that the quantum state measured after propagation can be
completely different from the initial state, even though the mean values of the
field are unaltered
Effects of three-body collisions in a two-mode Bose-Einstein condenstate
We study the effects of three-body collisions in the basic physical
properties of a two-mode Bose-Einstein condensate. By finding the exact
analytical solution of a model which includes two-body and three-body elastic
and mode-exchange collisions, we show analytically that three-body interactions
produce observable effects in the probability distribution of the ground state
and the dynamics of the relative population. In particular, we find that
three-body interactions under certain circumstances inhibit collapse of the
relative population.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures. I.F. previously published as I. Fuentes-Schuller
and I. Fuentes-Guridi. v2:minor changes, published versio
Luminescent and Scintillating Properties of Lanthanum Fluoride Nanocrystals in Response to Gamma/Neutron Irradiation: Codoping with Ce Activator, Yb Wavelength Shifter, and Gd Neutron Captor
A novel concept for detection and spectroscopy of gamma rays, and detection
of thermal neutrons based on codoped lanthanum fluoride nanocrystals containing
gadolinium is presented.The trends of colloidal synthesis of the mentioned
material, LaF3 co-doped with Ce as the activator, Yb as the wavelength-shifter
and Gd as the neutron captor, is reported. Nanocrystals of the mentioned
material were characterized by transmission electron microscopy (TEM), X-ray
diffraction (XRD), energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDS), optical
absorption, and photoluminescence spectroscopy. Gamma detection and its
potential spectroscopy feature have been confirmed. The neutron detection
capability has been confirmed by experiments performed using a 252Cf neutron
source.Comment: 5 figures, 16 page
Analyses of microstructural variation in the human striatum using non-negative matrix factorization
The striatum is a major subcortical connection hub that has been heavily implicated in a wide array of motor and cognitive functions. Here, we developed a normative multimodal, data-driven microstructural parcellation of the striatum using non-negative matrix factorization (NMF) based on multiple magnetic resonance imaging-based metrics (mean diffusivity, fractional anisotropy, and the ratio between T1- and T2-weighted structural scans) from the Human Connectome Project Young Adult dataset (n = 329 unrelated participants, age range: 22–35, F/M: 185/144). We further explored the biological and functional relationships of this parcellation by relating our findings to motor and cognitive performance in tasks known to involve the striatum as well as demographics. We identified 5 spatially distinct striatal components for each hemisphere. We also show the gain in component stability when using multimodal versus unimodal metrics. Our findings suggest distinct microstructural patterns in the human striatum that are largely symmetric and that relate mostly to age and sex. Our work also highlights the putative functional relevance of these striatal components to different designations based on a Neurosynth meta-analysis
From quantum feedback to probabilistic error correction: Manipulation of quantum beats in cavity QED
It is shown how to implement quantum feedback and probabilistic error
correction in an open quantum system consisting of a single atom, with ground-
and excited-state Zeeman structure, in a driven two-mode optical cavity. The
ground state superposition is manipulated and controlled through conditional
measurements and external fields, which shield the coherence and correct
quantum errors. Modeling of an experimentally realistic situation demonstrates
the robustness of the proposal for realization in the laboratory
Formalism for obtaining nuclear momentum distributions by the Deep Inelastic Neutron Scattering technique
We present a new formalism to obtain momentum distributions in condensed
matter from Neutron Compton Profiles measured by the Deep Inelastic Neutron
Scattering technique. The formalism describes exactly the Neutron Compton
Profiles as an integral in the momentum variable . As a result we obtain a
Volterra equation of the first kind that relates the experimentally measured
magnitude with the momentum distributions of the nuclei in the sample. The
integration kernel is related with the incident neutron spectrum, the total
cross section of the filter analyzer and the detectors efficiency function. A
comparison of the present formalism with the customarily employed approximation
based on a convolution of the momentum distribution with a resolution function
is presented. We describe the inaccuracies that the use of this approximation
produces, and propose a new data treatment procedure based on the present
formalism.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figure
Conditional control of quantum beats in a cavity QED system
We probe a ground-state superposition that produces a quantum beat in the
intensity correlation of a two-mode cavity QED system. We mix drive with
scattered light from an atomic beam traversing the cavity, and effectively
measure the interference between the drive and the light from the atom. When a
photon escapes the cavity, and upon detection, it triggers our feedback which
modulates the drive at the same beat frequency but opposite phase for a given
time window. This results in a partial interruption of the beat oscillation in
the correlation function, that then returns to oscillate.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, XVII Reuni\'on Iberoamericana de \'Optica, X
Encuentro de \'Optica, L\'aseres y Aplicaciones (RIAO-OPTILAS-2010
Laser-noise-induced correlations and anti-correlations in Electromagnetically Induced Transparency
High degrees of intensity correlation between two independent lasers were
observed after propagation through a rubidium vapor cell in which they generate
Electromagnetically Induced Transparency (EIT). As the optical field
intensities are increased, the correlation changes sign (becoming
anti-correlation). The experiment was performed in a room temperature rubidium
cell, using two diode lasers tuned to the Rb line (nm). The cross-correlation spectral function for the pump and probe fields
is numerically obtained by modeling the temporal dynamics of both field phases
as diffusing processes. We explored the dependence of the atomic response on
the atom-field Rabi frequencies, optical detuning and Doppler width. The
results show that resonant phase-noise to amplitude-noise conversion is at the
origin of the observed signal and the change in sign for the correlation
coefficient can be explained as a consequence of the competition between EIT
and Raman resonance processes.Comment: Accepted for publication in EPJ
- …