568 research outputs found
Quantum coherent control of the photo\-electron angular distribution in bichromatic ionization of atomic neon
We investigate the coherent control of the photo\-electron angular
distribution in bichromatic atomic ionization. Neon is selected as target since
it is one of the most popular systems in current gas-phase experiments with
free-electron lasers (FELSs). In particular, we tackle practical questions,
such as the role of the fine-structure splitting, the pulse length, and the
intensity. Time-dependent and stationary perturbation theory are employed, and
we also solve the time-dependent Schr\"odinger equation in a single-active
electron model. We consider neon ionized by a FEL pulse whose fundamental
frequency is in resonance with either or excitation. The
contribution of the non\-resonant two-photon process and its potential
constructive or destructive role for quantum coherent control is investigated.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figure
Displacement effect in strong-field atomic ionization by an XUV pulse
We study strong-field atomic ionization driven by an XUV pulse with a
non\-zero displacement, the quantity defined as the integral of the pulse
vector potential taken over the pulse duration. We demonstrate that the use of
such pulses may lead to an extreme sensitivity of the ionization process to
subtle changes of the parameters of a driving XUV pulse, in particular, the
ramp-on/off profile and the carrier envelope phase. We illustrate this
sensitivity for atomic hydrogen and lithium driven by few-femto\-second XUV
pulses with intensity in the range. We argue that the
observed effect is general and should modify strong-field ionization of any
atom, provided the ionization rate is sufficiently high.Comment: 5 pages, 7 figure
Estimation of genetic parameters and detection of chromosomal regions affecting the major milk proteins and their post translational modifications in Danish Holstein and Danish Jersey cattle
Linkage disequilibrium plot (r 2) of the DGAT region in the Danish Jersey breed. (PNG 342 kb
Examining the quality of knowledge transfers – the draft of an empirical research
Already successfully used products or designs, past projects or our own experiences can be the basis for the development of new products. As reference products or existing knowledge, it is reused in the development process and across generations of products. Since further, products are developed in cooperation, the development of new product generations is characterized by knowledge-intensive processes in which information and knowledge are exchanged between different kinds of knowledge carriers. The particular knowledge transfer here describes the identification of knowledge, its transmission from the knowledge carrier to the knowledge receiver, and its application by the knowledge receiver, which includes embodied knowledge of physical products. Initial empirical findings of the quantitative effects regarding the speed of knowledge transfers already have been examined. However, the factors influencing the quality of knowledge transfer to increase the efficiency and effectiveness of knowledge transfer in product development have not yet been examined empirically. Therefore, this paper prepares an experimental setting for the empirical investigation of the quality of knowledge transfers
Design of Strongly Modulating Pulses to Implement Precise Effective Hamiltonians for Quantum Information Processing
We describe a method for improving coherent control through the use of
detailed knowledge of the system's Hamiltonian. Precise unitary transformations
were obtained by strongly modulating the system's dynamics to average out
unwanted evolution. With the aid of numerical search methods, pulsed
irradiation schemes are obtained that perform accurate, arbitrary, selective
gates on multi-qubit systems. Compared to low power selective pulses, which
cannot average out all unwanted evolution, these pulses are substantially
shorter in time, thereby reducing the effects of relaxation. Liquid-state NMR
techniques on homonuclear spin systems are used to demonstrate the accuracy of
these gates both in simulation and experiment. Simulations of the coherent
evolution of a 3-qubit system show that the control sequences faithfully
implement the unitary operations, typically yielding gate fidelities on the
order of 0.999 and, for some sequences, up to 0.9997. The experimentally
determined density matrices resulting from the application of different control
sequences on a 3-spin system have overlaps of up to 0.99 with the expected
states, confirming the quality of the experimental implementation.Comment: RevTeX3, 11 pages including 2 tables and 5 figures; Journal of
Chemical Physics, in pres
Experimental ionization of atomic hydrogen with few-cycle pulses
We present the first experimental data on strong-field ionization of atomic
hydrogen by few-cycle laser pulses. We obtain quantitative agreement at the 10%
level between the data and an {\it ab initio} simulation over a wide range of
laser intensities and electron energies
Diffuse versus square-well confining potentials in modelling @C atoms
Attention: this version- of the manuscript differs from its previously
uploaded version- (arXiv:1112.6158v1) and subsequently published in 2012 J.
Phys. B \textbf{45} 105102 only by a removed typo in Eq.(2) of version-;
there was the erroneous factor "2" in both terms in the right-hand-side of the
Eq.(2) of version-. Now that the typo is removed, Eq.(2) is correct.
A perceived advantage for the replacement of a discontinuous square-well
pseudo-potential, which is often used by various researchers as an
approximation to the actual C cage potential in calculations of
endohedral atoms @C, by a more realistic diffuse potential is
explored. The photoionization of endohedral H@C and Xe@C is
chosen as the case study. The diffuse potential is modelled by a combination of
two Woods-Saxon potentials. It is demonstrated that photoionization spectra of
@C atoms are largely insensitive to the degree of diffuseness
of the potential borders, in a reasonably broad range of 's.
Alternatively, these spectra are found to be insensitive to discontinuity of
the square-well potential either. Both potentials result in practically
identical calculated spectra. New numerical values for the set of square-well
parameters, which lead to a better agreement between experimental and
theoretical data for @C spectra, are recommended for future studies.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figure
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