10,188 research outputs found
Tripartite Entanglement in a Bose Condensate by Stimulated Bragg Scattering
We show that it is possible to entangle three different many-particle states
by Bragg spectroscopy with nonclassical light in a Bose condensate of weakly
interacting atomic gases. Among these three states, two are of atoms
corresponding to two opposite momentum side-modes of the condensate; and the
other is of single-mode photons of the output probe beam. We demonstrate strong
dependence of the multiparticle entanglement on the quantum statistics of the
probe light. We present detailed results on entanglement keeping in view of the
possible experimental situation.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, Revte
Signature of strong atom-cavity interaction on critical coupling
We study a critically coupled cavity doped with resonant atoms with
metamaterial slabs as mirrors. We show how resonant atom-cavity interaction can
lead to a splitting of the critical coupling dip. The results are explained in
terms of the frequency and lifetime splitting of the coupled system.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure
A simple functional form for proton-Pb total reaction cross sections
A simple functional form has been found that gives a good representation of
the total reaction cross sections for the scattering from Pb of
protons with energies in the range 30 to 300 MeV.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figure
Finite temperature effects in light scattering off Cooper-paired Fermi atoms
We study stimulated light scattering off a superfluid Fermi gas of atoms at
finite temperature. We derive response function that takes into account vertex
correction due to final state interactions; and analyze finite temperature
effects on collective and quasiparticle excitations of a uniform superfluid
Fermi gas. Light polarization is shown to play an important role in
excitations. Our results suggest that it is possible to excite
Bogoliubov-Anderson phonon at a large scattering length by light scattering.Comment: 18 pages, 4 figures, Accepted in J. Phys. B: At. Mol. & Opt. Phy
Resonant enhancement of ultracold photoassociation rate by electric field induced anisotropic interaction
We study the effects of a static electric field on the photoassociation of a
heteronuclear atom-pair into a polar molecule. The interaction of permanent
dipole moment with a static electric field largely affects the ground state
continuum wave function of the atom-pair at short separations where
photoassociation transitions occur according to Franck-Condon principle.
Electric field induced anisotropic interaction between two heteronuclear ground
state atoms leads to scattering resonances at some specific electric fields.
Near such resonances the amplitude of scattering wave function at short
separation increases by several orders of magnitude. As a result,
photoaasociation rate is enhanced by several orders of magnitude near the
resonances. We discuss in detail electric field modified atom-atom scattering
properties and resonances. We calculate photoassociation rate that shows giant
enhancement due to electric field tunable anisotropic resonances. We present
selected results among which particularly important are the excitations of
higher rotational levels in ultracold photoassociation due to electric field
tunable resonances.Comment: 14 pages,9 figure
Low-Mass Dileptons at the CERN-SpS: Evidence for Chiral Restoration?
Using a rather complete description of the in-medium spectral function
- being constrained by various independent experimental information - we
calculate pertinent dilepton production rates from hot and dense hadronic
matter. The strong broadening of the resonance entails a reminiscence to
perturbative annihilation rates in the vicinity of the phase
boundary. The application to dilepton observables in Pb(158AGeV)+Au collisions
- incorporating recent information on the hadro-chemical composition at
CERN-SpS energies - essentially supports the broadening scenario. Possible
implications for the nature of chiral symmetry restoration are outlined.Comment: 6 pages ReVTeX including 5 eps-figure
Magneto-optical Feshbach resonance: Controlling cold collision with quantum interference
We propose a method of controlling two-atom interaction using both magnetic
and laser fields. We analyse the role of quantum interference between magnetic
and optical Feshbach resonances in controlling cold collision. In particular,
we demonstrate that this method allows us to suppress inelastic and enhance
elastic scattering cross sections. Quantum interference is shown to modify
significantly the threshold behaviour and resonant interaction of ultracold
atoms. Furthermore, we show that it is possible to manipulate not only the
spherically symmetric s-wave interaction but also the anisotropic higher
partial-wave interactions which are particularly important for high temperature
superfluid or superconducting phases of matter.Comment: 7 pages 3 figures, some minor errors are corrected, Accepted in J.
Phys.
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