8,525 research outputs found
Quantum Kinetic Theory VI: The Growth of a Bose-Einstein Condensate
A detailed analysis of the growth of a BEC is given, based on quantum kinetic
theory, in which we take account of the evolution of the occupations of lower
trap levels, and of the full Bose-Einstein formula for the occupations of
higher trap levels, as well as the Bose stimulated direct transfer of atoms to
the condensate level introduced by Gardiner et al. We find good agreement with
experiment at higher temperatures, but at lower temperatures the experimentally
observed growth rate is somewhat more rapid. We also confirm the picture of the
``kinetic'' region of evolution, introduced by Kagan et al., for the time up to
the initiation of the condensate. The behavior after initiation essentially
follows our original growth equation, but with a substantially increased rate
coefficient.
Our modelling of growth implicitly gives a model of the spatial shape of the
condensate vapor system as the condensate grows, and thus provides an
alternative to the present phenomenological fitting procedure, based on the sum
of a zero-chemical potential vapor and a Thomas-Fermi shaped condensate. Our
method may give substantially different results for condensate numbers and
temperatures obtained from phenomentological fits, and indicates the need for
more systematic investigation of the growth dynamics of the condensate from a
supersaturated vapor.Comment: TeX source; 29 Pages including 26 PostScript figure
Correcting low-frequency noise with continuous measurement
Low-frequency noise presents a serious source of decoherence in solid-state
qubits. When combined with a continuous weak measurement of the eigenstates,
the low-frequency noise induces a second-order relaxation between the qubit
states. Here we show that the relaxation provides a unique approach to
calibrate the low-frequency noise in the time-domain. By encoding one qubit
with two physical qubits that are alternatively calibrated, quantum logic gates
with high fidelity can be performed.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, submitte
Lower limit on the achievable temperature in resonator-based sideband cooling
A resonator can be effectively used as a cooler for another linear oscillator
with a much smaller frequency. A huge cooling effect, which could be used to
cool a mechanical oscillator below the energy of quantum fluctuations, has been
predicted by several authors. However, here we show that there is a lower limit
T* on the achievable temperature that was not considered in previous works and
can be higher than the quantum limit in realistic experimental realizations. We
also point out that the decay rate of the resonator, which previous studies
stress should be small, must be larger than the decay rate of the cooled
oscillator for effective cooling.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, uses psfra
Number-Phase Wigner Representation for Efficient Stochastic Simulations
Phase-space representations based on coherent states (P, Q, Wigner) have been
successful in the creation of stochastic differential equations (SDEs) for the
efficient stochastic simulation of high dimensional quantum systems. However
many problems using these techniques remain intractable over long integrations
times. We present a number-phase Wigner representation that can be unraveled
into SDEs. We demonstrate convergence to the correct solution for an anharmonic
oscillator with small dampening for significantly longer than other phase space
representations. This process requires an effective sampling of a non-classical
probability distribution. We describe and demonstrate a method of achieving
this sampling using stochastic weights.Comment: 7 pages, 1 figur
Theory of the Ramsey spectroscopy and anomalous segregation in ultra-cold rubidium
The recent anomalous segregation experiment of Lewandowski et al. (PRL, 88,
070403, 2002) shows dramatic, rapid internal state segregation for two
hyperfine levels of rubidium. We simulate an effective one dimensional model of
the system for experimental parameters and find reasonable agreement with the
data. The Ramsey frequency is found to be insensitive to the decoherence of the
superposition, and is only equivalent to the interaction energy shift for a
pure superposition. A Quantum Boltzmann equation describing collisions is
derived using Quantum Kinetic Theory, taking into account the different
scattering lengths of the internal states. As spin-wave experiments are likely
to be attempted at lower temperatures we examine the effect of degeneracy on
decoherence by considering the recent experiment of Lewandowski et al. where
degeneracy is around 10%. We also find that the segregation effect is only
possible when transport terms are included in the equations of motion, and that
the interactions only directly alter the momentum distributions of the states.
The segregation or spin wave effect is thus entirely due to coherent atomic
motion as foreseen in the experimental reportComment: 26 pages, 4 figures, to be published in J. Phys.
Tripartite entanglement and threshold properties of coupled intracavity downconversion and sum-frequency generation
The process of cascaded downconversion and sum-frequency generation inside an
optical cavity has been predicted to be a potential source of three-mode
continuous-variable entanglement. When the cavity is pumped by two fields, the
threshold properties have been analysed, showing that these are more
complicated than in well-known processes such as optical parametric
oscillation. When there is only a single pumping field, the entanglement
properties have been calculated using a linearised fluctuation analysis, but
without any consideration of the threshold properties or critical operating
points of the system. In this work we extend this analysis to demonstrate that
the singly pumped system demonstrates a rich range of threshold behaviour when
quantisation of the pump field is taken into account and that asymmetric
polychromatic entanglement is available over a wide range of operational
parameters.Comment: 24 pages, 15 figure
Emergent classicality in continuous quantum measurements
We develop a classical theoretical description for nonlinear many-body
dynamics that incorporates the back-action of a continuous measurement process.
The classical approach is compared with the exact quantum solution in an
example with an atomic Bose-Einstein condensate in a double-well potential
where the atom numbers in both potential wells are monitored by light
scattering. In the classical description the back-action of the measurements
appears as diffusion of the relative phase of the condensates on each side of
the trap. When the measurements are frequent enough to resolve the system
dynamics, the system behaves classically. This happens even deep in the quantum
regime, and demonstrates how classical physics emerges from quantum mechanics
as a result of measurement back-action
Kinetics of Bose-Einstein Condensation in a Trap
The formation process of a Bose-Einstein condensate in a trap is described
using a master equation based on quantum kinetic theory, which can be well
approximated by a description using only the condensate mode in interaction
with a thermalized bath of noncondensate atoms. A rate equation of the form n =
2W(n)[(1-exp((mu_n - mu)/kT))n + 1] is derived, in which the difference between
the condensate chemical potential mu_n and the bath chemical potential mu gives
the essential behavior. Solutions of this equation, in conjunction with the
theoretical description of the process of evaporative cooling, give a
characteristic latency period for condensate formation and appear to be
consistent with the observed behavior of both rubidium and sodium condensate
formation.Comment: 9 pages, Revte
Bogoliubov dynamics of condensate collisions using the positive-P representation
We formulate the time-dependent Bogoliubov dynamics of colliding
Bose-Einstein condensates in terms of a positive-P representation of the
Bogoliubov field. We obtain stochastic evolution equations for the field which
converge to the full Bogoliubov description as the number of realisations
grows. The numerical effort grows linearly with the size of the computational
lattice. We benchmark the efficiency and accuracy of our description against
Wigner distribution and exact positive-P methods. We consider its regime of
applicability, and show that it is the most efficient method in the common
situation - when the total particle number in the system is insufficient for a
truncated Wigner treatment.Comment: 9 pages. 5 figure
Phase-noise induced limitations on cooling and coherent evolution in opto-mechanical systems
We present a detailed theoretical discussion of the effects of ubiquitous
laser noise on cooling and the coherent dynamics in opto-mechanical systems.
Phase fluctuations of the driving laser induce modulations of the linearized
opto-mechanical coupling as well as a fluctuating force on the mirror due to
variations of the mean cavity intensity. We first evaluate the influence of
both effects on cavity cooling and find that for a small laser linewidth the
dominant heating mechanism arises from intensity fluctuations. The resulting
limit on the final occupation number scales linearly with the cavity intensity
both under weak and strong coupling conditions. For the strong coupling regime,
we also determine the effect of phase noise on the coherent transfer of single
excitations between the cavity and the mechanical resonator and obtain a
similar conclusion. Our results show that conditions for optical ground state
cooling and coherent operations are experimentally feasible and thus laser
phase noise does pose a challenge but not a stringent limitation for
opto-mechanical systems
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