923 research outputs found
On the treatment of -changing proton-hydrogen Rydberg atom collisions
Energy-conserving, angular momentum-changing collisions between protons and
highly excited Rydberg hydrogen atoms are important for precise understanding
of atomic recombination at the photon decoupling era, and the elemental
abundance after primordial nucleosynthesis. Early approaches to -changing
collisions used perturbation theory for only dipole-allowed () transitions. An exact non-perturbative quantum mechanical treatment is
possible, but it comes at computational cost for highly excited Rydberg states.
In this note we show how to obtain a semi-classical limit that is accurate and
simple, and develop further physical insights afforded by the non-perturbative
quantum mechanical treatment
Detectability of dissipative motion in quantum vacuum via superradiance
We propose an experiment for generating and detecting vacuum-induced
dissipative motion. A high frequency mechanical resonator driven in resonance
is expected to dissipate energy in quantum vacuum via photon emission. The
photons are stored in a high quality electromagnetic cavity and detected
through their interaction with ultracold alkali-metal atoms prepared in an
inverted population of hyperfine states. Superradiant amplification of the
generated photons results in a detectable radio-frequency signal temporally
distinguishable from the expected background.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Casimir force between eccentric cylinders
We consider the Casimir interaction between a cylinder and a hollow cylinder,
both conducting, with parallel axis and slightly different radii. The Casimir
force, which vanishes in the coaxial situation, is evaluated for both small and
large eccentricities using the proximity approximation. The cylindrical
configuration offers various experimental advantages with respect to the
parallel planes or the plane-sphere geometries, leading to favourable
conditions for the search of extra-gravitational forces in the micrometer range
and for the observation of finite temperature corrections.Comment: To be published in Europhysics Letters. 7 pages, 4 figure
Quantum dissipative effects in moving mirrors: a functional approach
We use a functional approach to study various aspects of the quantum
effective dynamics of moving, planar, dispersive mirrors, coupled to scalar or
Dirac fields, in different numbers of dimensions. We first compute the
Euclidean effective action, and use it to derive the imaginary part of the
`in-out' effective action. We also obtain, for the case of the real scalar
field in 1+1 dimensions, the Schwinger-Keldysh effective action and a
semiclassical Langevin equation that describes the motion of the mirror
including noise and dissipative effects due to its coupling to the quantum
fields.Comment: References added. Version to appear in Phys. Rev.
Exact Casimir interaction between eccentric cylinders
The Casimir force is the ultimate background in ongoing searches of
extra-gravitational forces in the micrometer range. Eccentric cylinders offer
favorable experimental conditions for such measurements as spurious
gravitational and electrostatic effects can be minimized. Here we report on the
evaluation of the exact Casimir interaction between perfectly conducting
eccentric cylinders using a mode summation technique, and study different
limiting cases of relevance for Casimir force measurements, with potential
implications for the understanding of mechanical properties of nanotubes.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Anomalies in electrostatic calibrations for the measurement of the Casimir force in a sphere-plane geometry
We have performed precision electrostatic calibrations in the sphere-plane
geometry and observed anomalous behavior. Namely, the scaling exponent of the
electrostatic signal with distance was found to be smaller than expected on the
basis of the pure Coulombian contribution and the residual potential found to
be distance dependent. We argue that these findings affect the accuracy of the
electrostatic calibrations and invite reanalysis of previous determinations of
the Casimir force.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Measurement-induced Squeezing of a Bose-Einstein Condensate
We discuss the dynamics of a Bose-Einstein condensate during its
nondestructive imaging. A generalized Lindblad superoperator in the condensate
master equation is used to include the effect of the measurement. A continuous
imaging with a sufficiently high laser intensity progressively drives the
quantum state of the condensate into number squeezed states. Observable
consequences of such a measurement-induced squeezing are discussed.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, submitted to PR
Photon creation in a spherical oscillating cavity
We study the photon creation inside a perfectly conducting, spherical
oscillating cavity. The electromagnetic field inside the cavity is described by
means of two scalar fields which satisfy Dirichlet and (generalized) Neumann
boundary conditions. As a preliminary step, we analyze the dynamical Casimir
effect for both scalar fields. We then consider the full electromagnetic case.
The conservation of angular momentum of the electromagnetic field is also
discussed, showing that photons inside the cavity are created in singlet
states.Comment: 14 pages, no figure
Are violations to temporal Bell inequalities there when somebody looks?
The possibility of observing violations of temporal Bell inequalities,
originally proposed by Leggett as a mean of testing the quantum mechanical
delocalization of suitably chosen macroscopic bodies, is discussed by taking
into account the effect of the measurement process. A general criterion
quantifying this possibility is defined and shown not to be fulfilled by the
various experimental configurations proposed so far to test inequalities of
different forms.Comment: 7 pages, 1 eps figure, needs europhys.sty and euromacr.tex, enclosed
in the .tar.gz file; accepted for publication in Europhysics Letter
- …
