49 research outputs found
An accelerator mode based technique for studying quantum chaos
We experimentally demonstrate a method for selecting small regions of phase
space for kicked rotor quantum chaos experiments with cold atoms. Our technique
uses quantum accelerator modes to selectively accelerate atomic wavepackets
with localized spatial and momentum distributions. The potential used to create
the accelerator mode and subsequently realize the kicked rotor system is formed
by a set of off-resonant standing wave light pulses. We also propose a method
for testing whether a selected region of phase space exhibits chaotic or
regular behavior using a Ramsey type separated field experiment.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, some modest revisions to previous version (esp.
to the figures) to aid clarity; accepted for publication in Physical Review A
(due out on January 1st 2003
Feedback control of spin systems
The feedback stabilization problem for ensembles of coupled spin 1/2 systems
is discussed from a control theoretic perspective. The noninvasive nature of
the bulk measurement allows for a fully unitary and deterministic closed loop.
The Lyapunov-based feedback design presented does not require spins that are
selectively addressable. With this method, it is possible to obtain control
inputs also for difficult tasks, like suppressing undesired couplings in
identical spin systems.Comment: 16 pages, 15 figure
Diffusion Resonances in Action Space for an Atom Optics Kicked Rotor with Decoherence
We numerically investigate momentum diffusion rates for the pulse kicked
rotor across the quantum to classical transition as the dynamics are made more
macroscopic by increasing the total system action. For initial and late time
rates we observe an enhanced diffusion peak which shifts and scales with
changing kick strength, and we also observe distinctive peaks around quantum
resonances. Our investigations take place in the context of a system of
ultracold atoms which is coupled to its environment via spontaneous emission
decoherence, and the effects should be realisable in ongoing experiments.Comment: 4 Pages, RevTeX 4, 5 Figures. Updated Figures, Minor Changes to text,
Corrected Reference
Coherent oscillations and incoherent tunnelling in one - dimensional asymmetric double - well potential
For a model 1d asymmetric double-well potential we calculated so-called
survival probability (i.e. the probability for a particle initially localised
in one well to remain there). We use a semiclassical (WKB) solution of
Schroedinger equation. It is shown that behaviour essentially depends on
transition probability, and on dimensionless parameter which is a ratio of
characteristic frequencies for low energy non-linear in-well oscillations and
inter wells tunnelling. For the potential describing a finite motion
(double-well) one has always a regular behaviour. For the small value of the
parameter there is well defined resonance pairs of levels and the survival
probability has coherent oscillations related to resonance splitting. However
for the large value of the parameter no oscillations at all for the survival
probability, and there is almost an exponential decay with the characteristic
time determined by Fermi golden rule. In this case one may not restrict oneself
to only resonance pair levels. The number of perturbed by tunnelling levels
grows proportionally to the value of this parameter (by other words instead of
isolated pairs there appear the resonance regions containing the sets of
strongly coupled levels). In the region of intermediate values of the parameter
one has a crossover between both limiting cases, namely the exponential decay
with subsequent long period recurrent behaviour.Comment: 19 pages, 7 figures, Revtex, revised version. Accepted to Phys. Rev.
Quantum Chaos Versus Classical Chaos: Why is Quantum Chaos Weaker?
We discuss the questions: How to compare quantitatively classical chaos with
quantum chaos? Which one is stronger? What are the underlying physical reasons
Nonlinearity effects in the kicked oscillator
The quantum kicked oscillator is known to display a remarkable richness of
dynamical behaviour, from ballistic spreading to dynamical localization. Here
we investigate the effects of a Gross Pitaevskii nonlinearity on quantum
motion, and provide evidence that the qualitative features depend strongly on
the parameters of the system.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Detecting new microRNAs in human osteoarthritic chondrocytes identifies miR-3085 as a human, chondrocyte-selective, microRNA
Objective: To use deep sequencing to identify novel microRNAs in human osteoarthritic cartilage which have a functional role in chondrocyte phenotype or function. Design: A small RNA library was prepared from human osteoarthritic primary chondrocytes using in-house adaptors and analysed by Illumina sequencing. Novel candidate microRNAs were validated by northern blot and qRT-PCR. Expression was measured in cartilage models. Targets of novel candidates were identified by microarray and computational analysis, validated using 3’-UTR-luciferase reporter plasmids. Protein levels were assessed by western blot and functional analysis by cell adhesion. Results: We identified 990 known microRNAs and 1621 potential novel microRNAs in human osteoarthritic chondrocytes, 60 of the latter were expressed in all samples assayed. MicroRNA-140-3p was the most highly expressed microRNA in osteoarthritic cartilage. Sixteen novel candidate microRNAs were analysed further, of which 6 remained after northern blot analysis. Three novel microRNAs were regulated across models of chondrogenesis, chondrocyte differentiation or cartilage injury. One sequence (novel #11), annotated in rodents as microRNA-3085-3p, was preferentially expressed in cartilage, dependent on chondrocyte differentiation and, in man, is located in an intron of the cartilage-expressed gene CRTAC-1. This microRNA was shown to target the ITGA5 gene directly (which encodes integrin alpha5) and inhibited adhesion to fibronectin (dependent on alpha5beta1 integrin). Conclusion: Deep sequencing has uncovered many potential microRNA candidates expressed in human cartilage. At least three of these show potential functional interest in cartilage homeostasis and osteoarthritis. Particularly, novel #11 (microRNA-3085-3p) which has been identified for the first time in man
Signatures of chaotic tunnelling
Recent experiments with cold atoms provide a significant step toward a better
understanding of tunnelling when irregular dynamics is present at the classical
level. In this paper, we lay out numerical studies which shed light on the
previous experiments, help to clarify the underlying physics and have the
ambition to be guidelines for future experiments.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev. E. Figures of better
quality can be found at http://www.phys.univ-tours.fr/~mouchet
Dynamical localization simulated on a few qubits quantum computer
We show that a quantum computer operating with a small number of qubits can
simulate the dynamical localization of classical chaos in a system described by
the quantum sawtooth map model. The dynamics of the system is computed
efficiently up to a time , and then the localization length
can be obtained with accuracy by means of order computer runs,
followed by coarse grained projective measurements on the computational basis.
We also show that in the presence of static imperfections a reliable
computation of the localization length is possible without error correction up
to an imperfection threshold which drops polynomially with the number of
qubits.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figure
Sub-Poissonian statistics in order-to-chaos transition
We study the phenomena at the overlap of quantum chaos and nonclassical
statistics for the time-dependent model of nonlinear oscillator. It is shown in
the framework of Mandel Q-parameter and Wigner function that the statistics of
oscillatory excitation number is drastically changed in order-to chaos
transition. The essential improvement of sub-Poissonian statistics in
comparison with an analogous one for the standard model of driven anharmonic
oscillator is observed for the regular operational regime. It is shown that in
the chaotic regime the system exhibits the range of sub- and super-Poissonian
statistics which alternate one to other depending on time intervals. Unusual
dependence of the variance of oscillatory number on the external noise level
for the chaotic dynamics is observed.Comment: 9 pages, RevTeX, 14 figure