865 research outputs found
Asymptotical photon distributions in the dissipative Dynamical Casimir Effect
Asymptotical formulas for the photon distribution function of a quantum
oscillator with time-dependent frequency and damping coefficients, interacting
with a thermal reservoir, are derived in the case of a large mean number of
quanta. Different regimes of excitation of an initial thermal state with an
arbitrary temperature are considered. New formulas are used to predict the
statistical properties of the electromagnetic field created in the experiments
on the Dynamical Casimir Effect which are now under preparation.Comment: 11 pages, accepted contribution to CEWQO 2009 proceedings (to appear
in Physica Scripta
Justification of the symmetric damping model of the dynamical Casimir effect in a cavity with a semiconductor mirror
A "microscopic" justification of the "symmetric damping" model of a quantum
oscillator with time-dependent frequency and time-dependent damping is given.
This model is used to predict results of experiments on simulating the
dynamical Casimir effect in a cavity with a photo-excited semiconductor mirror.
It is shown that the most general bilinear time-dependent coupling of a
selected oscillator (field mode) to a bath of harmonic oscillators results in
two equal friction coefficients for the both quadratures, provided all the
coupling coefficients are proportional to a single arbitrary function of time
whose duration is much shorter than the periods of all oscillators. The choice
of coupling in the rotating wave approximation form leads to the "mimimum
noise" model of the quantum damped oscillator, introduced earlier in a pure
phenomenological way.Comment: 9 pages, typos corrected, corresponds to the published version,
except for the reference styl
Photon creation from vacuum and interactions engineering in nonstationary circuit QED
We study theoretically the nonstationary circuit QED system in which the
artificial atom transition frequency, or the atom-cavity coupling, have a small
periodic time modulation, prescribed externally. The system formed by the atom
coupled to a single cavity mode is described by the Rabi Hamiltonian. We show
that, in the dispersive regime, when the modulation periodicity is tuned to the
`resonances', the system dynamics presents the dynamical Casimir effect,
resonant Jaynes-Cummings or resonant Anti-Jaynes-Cummings behaviors, and it can
be described by the corresponding effective Hamiltonians. In the resonant
atom-cavity regime and under the resonant modulation, the dynamics is similar
to the one occurring for a stationary two-level atom in a vibrating cavity, and
an entangled state with two photons can be created from vacuum. Moreover, we
consider the situation in which the atom-cavity coupling, the atomic frequency,
or both have a small nonperiodic time modulation, and show that photons can be
created from vacuum in the dispersive regime. Therefore, an analog of the
dynamical Casimir effect can be simulated in circuit QED, and several photons,
as well as entangled states, can be generated from vacuum due to the
anti-rotating term in the Rabi Hamiltonian.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figures. Talk presented at the International Workshop "60
Years of Casimir Effect", 23 - 27 June, 2008, Brasili
Vibrating Cavities - A numerical approach
We present a general formalism allowing for efficient numerical calculation
of the production of massless scalar particles from vacuum in a one-dimensional
dynamical cavity, i.e. the dynamical Casimir effect. By introducing a
particular parametrization for the time evolution of the field modes inside the
cavity we derive a coupled system of first-order linear differential equations.
The solutions to this system determine the number of created particles and can
be found by means of numerical methods for arbitrary motions of the walls of
the cavity. To demonstrate the method which accounts for the intermode coupling
we investigate the creation of massless scalar particles in a one-dimensional
vibrating cavity by means of three particular cavity motions. We compare the
numerical results with analytical predictions as well as a different numerical
approach.Comment: 28 pages, 19 figures, accepted for publication in J. Opt. B: Quantum
Semiclass. Op
Numerical approach to the dynamical Casimir effect
The dynamical Casimir effect for a massless scalar field in 1+1-dimensions is
studied numerically by solving a system of coupled first-order differential
equations. The number of scalar particles created from vacuum is given by the
solutions to this system which can be found by means of standard numerics. The
formalism already used in a former work is derived in detail and is applied to
resonant as well as off-resonant cavity oscillations.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in J. Phys. A (special
issue: Proceedings of QFEXT05, Barcelona, Sept. 5-9, 2005
The Schrodinger particle in an oscillating spherical cavity
We study a Schrodinger particle in an infinite spherical well with an
oscillating wall. Parametric resonances emerge when the oscillation frequency
is equal to the energy difference between two eigenstates of the static cavity.
Whereas an analytic calculation based on a two-level system approximation
reproduces the numerical results at low driving amplitudes, epsilon, we observe
a drastic change of behaviour when epsilon > 0.1, when new resonance states
appear bearing no apparent relation to the eigenstates of the static system.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures, corrected typo
Dynamical Casimir Effect in a Leaky Cavity at Finite Temperature
The phenomenon of particle creation within an almost resonantly vibrating
cavity with losses is investigated for the example of a massless scalar field
at finite temperature. A leaky cavity is designed via the insertion of a
dispersive mirror into a larger ideal cavity (the reservoir). In the case of
parametric resonance the rotating wave approximation allows for the
construction of an effective Hamiltonian. The number of produced particles is
then calculated using response theory as well as a non-perturbative approach.
In addition we study the associated master equation and briefly discuss the
effects of detuning. The exponential growth of the particle numbers and the
strong enhancement at finite temperatures found earlier for ideal cavities turn
out to be essentially preserved. The relevance of the results for experimental
tests of quantum radiation via the dynamical Casimir effect is addressed.
Furthermore the generalization to the electromagnetic field is outlined.Comment: 48 pages, 8 figures typos corrected & references added and update
Dynamical Casimir effect at finite temperature
Thermal effects on the creation of particles under the influence of
time-dependent boundary conditions are investigated. The dominant temperature
correction to the energy radiated by a moving mirror is derived by means of
response theory. For a resonantly vibrating cavity the thermal effect on the
number of created photons is obtained non-perturbatively. Finite temperatures
can enhance the pure vacuum effect by several orders of magnitude. The
relevance of finite temperature effects for the experimental verification of
the dynamical Casimir effect is addressed.Comment: 9 LaTex page
Properties of Squeezed-State Excitations
The photon distribution function of a discrete series of excitations of
squeezed coherent states is given explicitly in terms of Hermite polynomials of
two variables. The Wigner and the coherent-state quasiprobabilities are also
presented in closed form through the Hermite polynomials and their limiting
cases. Expectation values of photon numbers and their dispersion are
calculated. Some three-dimensional plots of photon distributions for different
squeezing parameters demonstrating oscillatory behaviour are given.Comment: Latex,35 pages,submitted to Quant.Semiclassical Op
- …