475 research outputs found
Influence functional approach to decoherence during Inflation
We show how the quantum to classical transition of the cosmological
fluctuations produced during inflation can be described by means of the
influence functional and the master equation. We split the inflaton field into
the system-field (long-wavelength modes), and the environment, represented by
its own short-wavelength modes. We compute the decoherence times for the
system-field modes and compare them with the other time scales of the model.Comment: 6 pages, no figures. Contributed talk to the Second International
Workshop DICE2004, Piombino, Ital
Correction to the geometric phase by structured environments: the onset of non-Markovian effects
We study the geometric phase of a two-level system under the presence of a
structured environment, particularly analysing its correction with the ohmicity
parameter and the onset of non-Markovianity. We firstly examine the system
coupled to a set of harmonic oscillators and studied the decoherence factor as
function of the environment's ohmicity parameter. Secondly, we propose the
two-level system coupled to a non-equilibrium environment, and show that these
environments display non-Markovian effects for all values of the ohmicity
parameter. The geometric phase of the two-level system is therefore computed
under the presence of both types of environment. The correction to the unitary
geometric phase is analysed in both, Markovian and non-Markovian regimes. Under
Markovian environments, the correction induced on the system's phase is mainly
ruled by the coupling constant between the system and the environment, while in
the non-Markovian regime, memory effects seem to trigger a significant
correction to the unitary geometric phase. The result is significant to the
quantum information processing based on the geometric phase in quantum open
systemsComment: 7 figures. Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. A. arXiv admin
note: text overlap with arXiv:1303.493
Decoherence of a solid-state qubit by different noise correlation spectra
The interaction between solid-state qubits and their environmental degrees of
freedom produces non-unitary effects like decoherence and dissipation.
Uncontrolled decoherence is one of the main obstacles that must be overcome in
quantum information processing. We study the dynamically decay of coherences in
a solid-state qubit by means of the use of a master equation. We analyse the
effects induced by thermal Ohmic environments and low-frequency 1/f noise. We
focus on the effect of longitudinal and transversal noise on the
superconducting qubit's dynamics. Our results can be used to design
experimental future setups when manipulating superconducting qubits.Comment: 14 pages, 9 figures. Version to appear in Physics Letters A. arXiv
admin note: text overlap with arXiv:0809.4716 by other author
Decoherence in composite quantum open systems: the effectiveness of unstable degrees of freedom
The effect induced by an environment on a composite quantum system is
studied. The model considers the composite system as comprised by a subsystem A
coupled to a subsystem B which is also coupled to an external environment. We
study all possible four combinations of subsystems A and B made up with a
harmonic oscillator and an upside down oscillator. We analyzed the decoherence
suffered by subsystem A due to an effective environment composed by subsystem B
and the external reservoir. In all the cases we found that subsystem A
decoheres even though it interacts with the environment only through its sole
coupling to B. However, the effectiveness of the diffusion depends on the
unstable nature of subsystem A and B. Therefore, the role of this degree of
freedom in the effective environment is analyzed in detailComment: 20 pages, 4 figures. Version to appear in Int. J. Mod. Phys.
Decoherence and Loss of Entanglement in Acoustic Black Holes
We studied the process of decoherence in acoustic black holes. We focused on
the ion trap model proposed by Horstmann et al. (Phys. Rev. Lett. 104, 250403
(2010)) but the formalism is general to any experimental implementation. For
that particular setup, we computed the decoherence time for the experimental
parameters that they proposed. We found that a quantum to classical transition
occurs during the measurement and we proposed improved parameters to avoid such
a feature. We also studied the entanglement between the Hawking-pair phonons
for an acoustic black hole while in contact with a reservoir, through the
quantum correlations, showing that they remain strongly correlated for small
enough times and temperatures.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, accepted in Phys. Rev. Let
Closed time path approach to the Casimir energy in real media
The closed time path formalism is applied, in the framework of open quantum
systems, to study the time evolution of the expectation value of the
energy-momentum tensor of a scalar field in the presence of real materials. We
analyze quantum fluctuations in a fully non-equilibrium scenario, when the
scalar field is interacting with the polarization degrees of freedom of matter,
described as quantum Brownian particles. A generalized analysis was done for
two types of couplings between the field and the material. On the one hand, we
considered a bilinear coupling, and on the other hand, a (more realistic)
current-type coupling as in the case of the electromagnetic field interacting
with matter. We considered the high temperature limit for the field, keeping
arbitrary temperatures for each part of the volume elements of the material. We
obtained a closed form for the Hadamard propagator, which let us study the
dynamical evolution of the expectations values of the energy-momentum tensor
components from the initial time. We showed that two contributions always take
place in the transient evolution: one of these is associated to the material
and the other one is only associated to the field. Transient features were
studied and the long-time limit was derived in several cases. We proved that in
the steady situation of a field in n + 1 dimensions, the material always
contribute unless is non-dissipative. Conversely, the proper field contribution
vanishes unless the material is non-dissipative or, moreover, at least for the
1 + 1 case, if there are regions without material. We conclude that any steady
quantization scheme in 1 + 1 dimensions must consider both contributions and we
argue why these results are physically expected from a dynamical point of view,
and also could be valid for higher dimensions based on the expected continuity
between the non-dissipative and real material cases.Comment: 28 pages, no figures. Version to appear in Phys. Rev.
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