280 research outputs found

    A note on the switching adiabatic theorem

    Full text link
    We derive a nearly optimal upper bound on the running time in the adiabatic theorem for a switching family of Hamiltonians. We assume the switching Hamiltonian is in the Gevrey class GαG^\alpha as a function of time, and we show that the error in adiabatic approximation remains small for running times of order g−2 ∣ln⁡ g ∣6αg^{-2}\,|\ln\,g\,|^{6\alpha}. Here gg denotes the minimal spectral gap between the eigenvalue(s) of interest and the rest of the spectrum of the instantaneous Hamiltonian.Comment: 20 pages, no figures, to appear in JM

    Transport and Dissipation in Quantum Pumps

    Full text link
    This paper is about adiabatic transport in quantum pumps. The notion of ``energy shift'', a self-adjoint operator dual to the Wigner time delay, plays a role in our approach: It determines the current, the dissipation, the noise and the entropy currents in quantum pumps. We discuss the geometric and topological content of adiabatic transport and show that the mechanism of Thouless and Niu for quantized transport via Chern numbers cannot be realized in quantum pumps where Chern numbers necessarily vanish.Comment: 31 pages, 10 figure

    Dynamics of a classical Hall system driven by a time-dependent Aharonov--Bohm flux

    Full text link
    We study the dynamics of a classical particle moving in a punctured plane under the influence of a strong homogeneous magnetic field, an electrical background, and driven by a time-dependent singular flux tube through the hole. We exhibit a striking classical (de)localization effect: in the far past the trajectories are spirals around a bound center; the particle moves inward towards the flux tube loosing kinetic energy. After hitting the puncture it becomes ``conducting'': the motion is a cycloid around a center whose drift is outgoing, orthogonal to the electric field, diffusive, and without energy loss

    Extinction Rates for Fluctuation-Induced Metastabilities : A Real-Space WKB Approach

    Full text link
    The extinction of a single species due to demographic stochasticity is analyzed. The discrete nature of the individual agents and the Poissonian noise related to the birth-death processes result in local extinction of a metastable population, as the system hits the absorbing state. The Fokker-Planck formulation of that problem fails to capture the statistics of large deviations from the metastable state, while approximations appropriate close to the absorbing state become, in general, invalid as the population becomes large. To connect these two regimes, a master equation based on a real space WKB method is presented, and is shown to yield an excellent approximation for the decay rate and the extreme events statistics all the way down to the absorbing state. The details of the underlying microscopic process, smeared out in a mean field treatment, are shown to be crucial for an exact determination of the extinction exponent. This general scheme is shown to reproduce the known results in the field, to yield new corollaries and to fit quite precisely the numerical solutions. Moreover it allows for systematic improvement via a series expansion where the small parameter is the inverse of the number of individuals in the metastable state

    Anomalous decay of a prepared state due to non-Ohmic coupling to the continuum

    Full text link
    We study the decay of a prepared state E0E_0 into a continuum {E_k} in the case of non-Ohmic models. This means that the coupling is ∣Vk,0∣∝∣Ek−E0∣s−1|V_{k,0}| \propto |E_k-E_0|^{s-1} with s≠1s \ne 1. We find that irrespective of model details there is a universal generalized Wigner time t0t_0 that characterizes the evolution of the survival probability P0(t)P_0(t). The generic decay behavior which is implied by rate equation phenomenology is a slowing down stretched exponential, reflecting the gradual resolution of the bandprofile. But depending on non-universal features of the model a power-law decay might take over: it is only for an Ohmic coupling to the continuum that we get a robust exponential decay that is insensitive to the nature of the intra-continuum couplings. The analysis highlights the co-existence of perturbative and non-perturbative features in the dynamics. It turns out that there are special circumstances in which t0t_0 is reflected in the spreading process and not only in the survival probability, contrary to the naive linear response theory expectation.Comment: 13 pages, 11 figure

    The weak localization for the alloy-type Anderson model on a cubic lattice

    Full text link
    We consider alloy type random Schr\"odinger operators on a cubic lattice whose randomness is generated by the sign-indefinite single-site potential. We derive Anderson localization for this class of models in the Lifshitz tails regime, i.e. when the coupling parameter λ\lambda is small, for the energies E≀−Cλ2E \le -C \lambda^2.Comment: 45 pages, 2 figures. To appear in J. Stat. Phy

    Mean-Field Dynamics: Singular Potentials and Rate of Convergence

    Full text link
    We consider the time evolution of a system of NN identical bosons whose interaction potential is rescaled by N−1N^{-1}. We choose the initial wave function to describe a condensate in which all particles are in the same one-particle state. It is well known that in the mean-field limit N→∞N \to \infty the quantum NN-body dynamics is governed by the nonlinear Hartree equation. Using a nonperturbative method, we extend previous results on the mean-field limit in two directions. First, we allow a large class of singular interaction potentials as well as strong, possibly time-dependent external potentials. Second, we derive bounds on the rate of convergence of the quantum NN-body dynamics to the Hartree dynamics.Comment: Typos correcte

    Time-Energy coherent states and adiabatic scattering

    Full text link
    Coherent states in the time-energy plane provide a natural basis to study adiabatic scattering. We relate the (diagonal) matrix elements of the scattering matrix in this basis with the frozen on-shell scattering data. We describe an exactly solvable model, and show that the error in the frozen data cannot be estimated by the Wigner time delay alone. We introduce the notion of energy shift, a conjugate of Wigner time delay, and show that for incoming state ρ(H0)\rho(H_0) the energy shift determines the outgoing state.Comment: 11 pages, 1 figur
    • 

    corecore