4,705 research outputs found
Effect of atomic beam alignment on photon correlation measurements in cavity QED
Quantum trajectory simulations of a cavity QED system comprising an atomic
beam traversing a standing-wave cavity are carried out. The delayed photon
coincident rate for forwards scattering is computed and compared with the
measurements of Rempe et al. [Phys. Rev. Lett. 67, 1727 (1991)] and Foster et
al. [Phys. Rev. A 61, 053821 (2000)]. It is shown that a moderate atomic beam
misalignment can account for the degradation of the predicted correlation. Fits
to the experimental data are made in the weak-field limit with a single
adjustable parameter--the atomic beam tilt from perpendicular to the cavity
axis. Departures of the measurement conditions from the weak-field limit are
discussed.Comment: 15 pages and 13 figure
Atom detection in a two-mode optical cavity with intermediate coupling: Autocorrelation studies
We use an optical cavity in the regime of intermediate coupling between atom
and cavity mode to detect single moving atoms. Degenerate polarization modes
allow excitation of the atoms in one mode and collection of spontaneous
emission in the other, while keeping separate the two sources of light; we
obtain a higher confidence and efficiency of detection by adding
cavity-enhanced Faraday rotation. Both methods greatly benefit from coincidence
detection of photons, attaining fidelities in excess of 99% in less than 1
microsecond. Detailed studies of the second-order intensity autocorrelation
function of light from the signal mode reveal evidence of antibunched photon
emissions and the dynamics of single-atom transits.Comment: 10 pages, 10 figures, to be published in Phys. Rev.
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
Maneuver and buffet characteristics of fighter aircraft
Recent research efforts in the improvement of the maneuverability of fighter aircraft in the high-subsonic and transonic speed range are reviewed with emphasis on the factors affecting aerodynamic boundaries, such as maximum obtainable lift, buffet onset, pitchup, wing rock, and nose slice. The investigations were made using a general research configuration which encompassed a systematic matrix of wing-design parameters. These results illustrated the sensitivity of section and planform geometry to a selected design point. The incorporation of variable-geometry wing devices in the form of flaps or leading-edge slats was shown to provide controlled flow over a wide range of flight conditions and substantial improvements in maneuver capabilities. Additional studies indicated that the blending of a highly swept maneuver strake with an efficient, moderately swept wing offers a promising approach for improving maneuver characteristics at high angles of attack without excessive penalties in structural weight
Nonlinear photon transport in a semiconductor waveguide-cavity system containing a single quantum dot: Anharmonic cavity-QED regime
We present a semiconductor master equation technique to study the
input/output characteristics of coherent photon transport in a semiconductor
waveguide-cavity system containing a single quantum dot. We use this approach
to investigate the effects of photon propagation and anharmonic cavity-QED for
various dot-cavity interaction strengths, including weakly-coupled,
intermediately-coupled, and strongly-coupled regimes. We demonstrate that for
mean photon numbers much less than 0.1, the commonly adopted weak excitation
(single quantum) approximation breaks down, even in the weak coupling regime.
As a measure of the anharmonic multiphoton-correlations, we compute the Fano
factor and the correlation error associated with making a semiclassical
approximation. We also explore the role of electron--acoustic-phonon scattering
and find that phonon-mediated scattering plays a qualitatively important role
on the light propagation characteristics. As an application of the theory, we
simulate a conditional phase gate at a phonon bath temperature of K in the
strong coupling regime.Comment: To appear in PR
Multiple-time correlation functions for non-Markovian interaction: Beyond the Quantum Regression Theorem
Multiple time correlation functions are found in the dynamical description of
different phenomena. They encode and describe the fluctuations of the dynamical
variables of a system. In this paper we formulate a theory of non-Markovian
multiple-time correlation functions (MTCF) for a wide class of systems. We
derive the dynamical equation of the {\it reduced propagator}, an object that
evolve state vectors of the system conditioned to the dynamics of its
environment, which is not necessarily at the vacuum state at the initial time.
Such reduced propagator is the essential piece to obtain multiple-time
correlation functions. An average over the different environmental histories of
the reduced propagator permits us to obtain the evolution equations of the
multiple-time correlation functions. We also study the evolution of MTCF within
the weak coupling limit and it is shown that the multiple-time correlation
function of some observables satisfy the Quantum Regression Theorem (QRT),
whereas other correlations do not. We set the conditions under which the
correlations satisfy the QRT. We illustrate the theory in two different cases;
first, solving an exact model for which the MTCF are explicitly given, and
second, presenting the results of a numerical integration for a system coupled
with a dissipative environment through a non-diagonal interaction.Comment: Submitted (04 Jul 04
Measurement-induced entanglement of two superconducting qubits
We study the problem of two superconducting quantum qubits coupled via a
resonator. If only one quanta is present in the system and the number of
photons in the resonator is measured with a null result, the qubits end up in
an entangled Bell state. Here we look at one source of errors in this quantum
nondemolition scheme due to the presence of more than one quanta in the
resonator, previous to the measurement. By analyzing the structure of the
conditional Hamiltonian with arbitrary number of quanta, we show that the
scheme is remarkably robust against these type of errors.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Continuous quantum non-demolition measurement of Fock states of a nanoresonator using feedback-controlled circuit QED
We propose a scheme for the quantum non-demolition (QND) measurement of Fock
states of a nanomechanical resonator via feedback control of a coupled circuit
QED system. A Cooper pair box (CPB) is coupled to both the nanoresonator and
microwave cavity. The CPB is read-out via homodyne detection on the cavity and
feedback control is used to effect a non-dissipative measurement of the CPB.
This realizes an indirect QND measurement of the nanoresonator via a
second-order coupling of the CPB to the nanoresonator number operator. The
phonon number of the Fock state may be determined by integrating the stochastic
master equation derived, or by processing of the measurement signal.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
- …