185 research outputs found

    Influence of monolayer contamination on electric-field-noise heating in ion traps

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    Electric field noise is a hinderance to the assembly of large scale quantum computers based on entangled trapped ions. Apart from ubiquitous technical noise sources, experimental studies of trapped ion heating have revealed additional limiting contributions to this noise, originating from atomic processes on the electrode surfaces. In a recent work [A. Safavi-Naini et al., Phys. Rev. A 84, 023412 (2011)] we described a microscopic model for this excess electric field noise, which points a way towards a more systematic understanding of surface adsorbates as progenitors of electric field jitter noise. Here, we address the impact of surface monolayer contamination on adsorbate induced noise processes. By using exact numerical calculations for H and N atomic monolayers on an Au(111) surface representing opposite extremes of physisorption and chemisorption, we show that an additional monolayer can significantly affect the noise power spectrum and either enhance or suppress the resulting heating rates.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure

    Theory and simulation of spectral line broadening by exoplanetary atmospheric haze

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    Atmospheric haze is the leading candidate for the flattening of expolanetary spectra, as it's also an important source of opacity in the atmospheres of solar system planets, satellites, and comets. Exoplanetary transmission spectra, which carry information about how the planetary atmospheres become opaque to stellar light in transit, show broad featureless absorption in the region of wavelengths corresponding to spectral lines of sodium, potassium and water. We develop a detailed atomistic model, describing interactions of atomic or molecular radiators with dust and atmospheric haze particulates. This model incorporates a realistic structure of haze particulates from small nano-size seed particles up to sub-micron irregularly shaped aggregates, accounting for both pairwise collisions between the radiator and haze perturbers, and quasi-static mean field shift of levels in haze environments. This formalism can explain large flattening of absorption and emission spectra in haze atmospheres and shows how the radiator - haze particle interaction affects the absorption spectral shape in the wings of spectral lines and near their centers. The theory can account for nearly all realistic structure, size and chemical composition of haze particulates and predict their influence on absorption and emission spectra in hazy environments. We illustrate the utility of the method by computing shift and broadening of the emission spectra of the sodium D line in an argon haze. The simplicity, elegance and generality of the proposed model should make it amenable to a broad community of users in astrophysics and chemistry.Comment: 16 pages, 4 figures, submitted to MNRA

    Long-range interactions between a He(23S2 ^3S) atom and a He(23P2 ^3P) atom for like isotopes

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    For the interactions between a He(23S2 ^3S) atom and a He(23P2 ^3P) atom for like isotopes, we report perturbation theoretic calculations using accurate variational wave functions in Hylleraas coordinates of the coefficients determining the potential energies at large internuclear separations. We evaluate the coefficient C3C_{3} of the first order resonant dipole-dipole energy and the van der Waals coefficients C6C_{6}, C8C_{8}, and C10C_{10} for the second order energies arising from the mutual perturbations of instantaneous electric dipole, quadrupole, and octupole interactions. We also evaluate the coefficient C9C_{9} of the leading contribution to the third order energy. We establish definitive values including treatment of the finite nuclear mass for the 3{}^3He(23S2 ^3S)--3{}^3He(23P2 ^3P) and 4{}^4He(23S2 ^3S)--4{}^4He(23P2 ^3P) interactions.Comment: This article has been accepted by Physical Review

    Long-range interactions for He(nSn S)--He(n′S)(n' S) and He(nSn S)--He(n′P)(n' P)

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    The energetically lowest five states of a helium atom are: He(11S1^1S), He(23S2^3S), He(21S2^1S), He(23P2^3P), and He(21P2^1P). Long-range interaction coefficients C3C_3, C6C_6, C8C_8, C9C_9, and C10C_{10} for all S−SS-S and S−PS-P pairs of these states are calculated precisely using correlated wave functions in Hylleraas coordinates. Finite nuclear isotope mass effects are included

    Observation of blue-shifted ultralong-range Cs2_{2} Rydberg molecules

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    We observe ultralong-range blue-shifted Cs2_{2} molecular states near ns1/2ns_{1/2} Rydberg states in an optical dipole trap, where 31≤n≤3431\leq n\leq34. The accidental near degeneracy of (n−4)l(n-4)l and nsns Rydberg states for l>2l>2 in Cs, due to the small fractional nsns quantum defect, leads to non-adiabatic coupling among these states, producing potential wells above the nsns thresholds. Two important consequences of admixing high angular momentum states with nsns states are the formation of large permanent dipole moments, ∼15−100 \sim 15-100\,Debye, and accessibility of these states via two-photon association. The observed states are in excellent agreement with theory. Both projections of the total angular momentum on the internuclear axis are visible in the experiment
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