1,468 research outputs found
Upper quantum Lyapunov Exponent and Anosov relations for quantum systems driven by a classical flow
We generalize the definition of quantum Anosov properties and the related
Lyapunov exponents to the case of quantum systems driven by a classical flow,
i.e. skew-product systems. We show that the skew Anosov properties can be
interpreted as regular Anosov properties in an enlarged Hilbert space, in the
framework of a generalized Floquet theory. This extension allows us to describe
the hyperbolicity properties of almost-periodic quantum parametric oscillators
and we show that their upper Lyapunov exponents are positive and equal to the
Lyapunov exponent of the corresponding classical parametric oscillators. As
second example, we show that the configurational quantum cat system satisfies
quantum Anosov properties.Comment: 17 pages, no figur
Small-x Parton Distributions of Large Hadronic Targets
A simple and intuitive calculation, based on the semiclassical approximation,
demonstrates how the large size of a hadronic target introduces a new
perturbative scale into the process of small-x deep inelastic scattering. The
above calculation, which is performed in the target rest frame, is compared to
the McLerran-Venugopalan model for scattering off large nuclei, which has first
highlighted this effect in the infinite momentum frame. It is shown that the
two approaches, i.e., the rest frame based semiclassical calculation and the
infinite momentum frame based McLerran-Venugopalan approach are quantitatively
consistent.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figure
Integrability and level crossing manifolds in a quantum Hamiltonian system
We consider a two-spin model, represented classically by a nonlinear
autonomous Hamiltonian system with two degrees of freedom and a nontrivial
integrability condition, and quantum mechanically by a real symmetric
Hamiltonian matrix with blocks of dimensionalities K=l(l+1)/2, l=1,2,... In the
six-dimensional (6D) parameter space of this model, classical integrability is
satisfied on a 5D hypersurface, and level crossings occur on 4D manifolds that
are completely embedded in the integrability hypersurface except for some
lower-D sub-manifolds. Under mild assumptions, the classical integrability
condition can be reconstructed from a purely quantum mechanical study of level
degeneracies in finite-dimensional invariant blocks of the Hamiltonian matrix.
Our conclusions are based on rigorous results for K=3 and on numerical results
for K=6,10.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figure
Structure of nonlinear gauge transformations
Nonlinear Doebner-Goldin [Phys. Rev. A 54, 3764 (1996)] gauge transformations
(NGT) defined in terms of a wave function do not form a group. To get
a group property one has to consider transformations that act differently on
different branches of the complex argument function and the knowledge of the
value of is not sufficient for a well defined NGT. NGT that are well
defined in terms of form a semigroup parametrized by a real number
and a nonzero which is either an integer or . An extension of NGT to projectors and general density matrices
leads to NGT with complex . Both linearity of evolution and Hermiticity
of density matrices are gauge dependent properties.Comment: Final version, to be published in Phys.Rev.A (Rapid Communication),
April 199
Quantum diagonalization of Hermitean matrices
To measure an observable of a quantum mechanical system leaves it in one of its eigenstates and the result of the measurement is one of its eigenvalues. This process is shown to be a computational resource: Hermitean (N ×N) matrices can be diagonalized, in principle, by performing appropriate quantum mechanical measurements. To do so, one considers the given matrix as an observable of a single spin with appropriate length s which can be measured using a generalized Stern-Gerlach apparatus. Then, each run provides one eigenvalue of the observable. As the underlying working principle is the `collapse of the wavefunction' associated with a measurement, the procedure is neither a digital nor an analogue calculation - it defines thus a new example of a quantum mechanical method of computation
JIMWLK evolution of the odderon
We study the effects of a parity-odd "odderon" correlation in Jalilian-Marian-Iancu-McLerran-Weigert-Leonidov-Kovner renormalization group evolution at high energy. Firstly we show that in the eikonal picture where the scattering is described by Wilson lines, one obtains a strict mathematical upper limit for the magnitude of the odderon amplitude compared to the parity-even Pomeron one. This limit increases with N-c, approaching infinity in the infinite N-c limit. We use a systematic extension of the Gaussian approximation including both two-and three-point correlations which enables us to close the system of equations even at finite N-c. In the large-N-c limit we recover an evolution equation derived earlier. By solving this equation numerically we confirm that the odderon amplitude decreases faster in the nonlinear case than in the linear Balitsky-Fadin-Kuraev-Lipatov limit. We also point out that, in the three-point truncation at finite N-c, the presence of an odderon component introduces azimuthal angular correlations similar to cos(n phi) at all n in the target color field. These correlations could potentially have an effect on future studies of multiparticle angular correlations.Peer reviewe
How to determine a quantum state by measurements: The Pauli problem for a particle with arbitrary potential
The problem of reconstructing a pure quantum state ¿¿> from measurable quantities is considered for a particle moving in a one-dimensional potential V(x). Suppose that the position probability distribution ¿¿(x,t)¿2 has been measured at time t, and let it have M nodes. It is shown that after measuring the time evolved distribution at a short-time interval ¿t later, ¿¿(x,t+¿t)¿2, the set of wave functions compatible with these distributions is given by a smooth manifold M in Hilbert space. The manifold M is isomorphic to an M-dimensional torus, TM. Finally, M additional expectation values of appropriately chosen nonlocal operators fix the quantum state uniquely. The method used here is the analog of an approach that has been applied successfully to the corresponding problem for a spin system
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