1,674 research outputs found
Quantum turnstile operation of single-molecule magnets
The time-dependent transport through single-molecule magnets coupled to
magnetic or non-magnetic electrodes is studied in the framework of the
generalized master equation method. We investigate the transient regime induced
by the periodic switching of the source and drain contacts. If the electrodes
have opposite magnetizations the quantum turnstile operation allows the
stepwise writing of intermediate excited states. In turn, the transient
currents provide a way to read these states. Within our approach we take into
account both the uniaxial and transverse anisotropy. The latter may induce
additional quantum tunneling processes which affect the efficiency of the
proposed read-and-write scheme. An equally weighted mixture of molecular spin
states can be prepared if one of the electrodes is ferromagnetic.Comment: 19 pages, 6 figure
Vacuum refractive indices and helicity flip in strong-field QED
Vacuum birefringence is governed by the amplitude for a photon to flip
helicity or polarisation state in an external field. Here we calculate the flip
and non-flip amplitudes in arbitrary plane wave backgrounds, along with the
induced spacetime-dependent refractive indices of the vacuum. We compare the
behaviour of the amplitudes in the low energy and high energy regimes, and
analyse the impact of pulse shape and energy. We also provide the first
lightfront-QED derivation of the coefficients in the Heisenberg-Euler effective
action.Comment: Version 2: additional results added, including discussion of vacuum
refractive indices, analysis of flip and non-flip ampltidues at high-energy,
additional plots, new title. Now 17 pages, 10 figure
Photon polarization in light-by-light scattering: Finite size effects
We derive a simple expression for the photon helicity and polarization-flip probabilities in arbitrary background fields, in the low-energy regime. Taking the background to model a focused laser beam, we study the impact of pulse shape and collision geometry on the probabilities and on ellipticity signals of vacuum birefringence. We find that models which do not account for pulse duration can overestimate all signals in near head-on collisions by up to an order of magnitude. Taking pulse duration into account, the flip probability becomes relatively insensitive to both angular incidence and the fine details of the pulse structure
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