452 research outputs found
Periodically-driven cold atoms: the role of the phase
Numerous theoretical and experimental studies have investigated the dynamics
of cold atoms subjected to time periodic fields. Novel effects dependent on the
amplitude and frequency of the driving field, such as Coherent Destruction of
Tunneling have been identified and observed. However, in the last year or so,
three distinct types of experiments have demonstrated for the first time,
interesting behaviour associated with the driving phase: i.e. for systems
experiencing a driving field of general form ,
different types of large scale oscillations and directed motion were observed.
We investigate and explain the phenomenon of Super-Bloch Oscillations (SBOs) in
relation to the other experiments and address the role of initial phase in
general. We analyse and compare the role of in systems with homogeneous
forces (), such as cold atoms in shaken or amplitude-modulated
optical lattices, as well as non-homogeneous forces (), such
as the sloshing of atoms in driven traps, and clarify the physical origin of
the different -dependent effects.Comment: 10 pages, 1 figur
Ac Stark Effects and Harmonic Generation in Periodic Potentials
The ac Stark effect can shift initially nonresonant minibands in
semiconductor superlattices into multiphoton resonances. This effect can result
in strongly enhanced generation of a particular desired harmonic of the driving
laser frequency, at isolated values of the amplitude.Comment: RevTeX, 10 pages (4 figures available on request), Preprint
UCSBTH-93-2
Level crossings in a cavity QED model
In this paper I study the dynamics of a two-level atom interacting with a
standing wave field. When the atom is subjected to a weak linear force, the
problem can be turned into a time dependent one, and the evolution is
understood from the band structure of the spectrum. The presence of level
crossings in the spectrum gives rise to Bloch oscillations of the atomic
motion. Here I investigate the effects of the atom-field detuning parameter. A
variety of different level crossings are obtained by changing the magnitude of
the detuning, and the behaviour of the atomic motion is strongly affected due
to this. I also consider the situation in which the detuning is oscillating in
time and its impact on the atomic motion. Wave packet simulations of the full
problem are treated numerically and the results are compared with analytical
solutions given by the standard Landau-Zener and the three-level Landau-Zener
models.Comment: 12 pages, 10 figure
Theory of Coherent Time-dependent Transport in One-dimensional Multiband Semiconductor Superlattices
We present an analytical study of one-dimensional semiconductor superlattices
in external electric fields, which may be time-dependent. A number of general
results for the (quasi)energies and eigenstates are derived. An equation of
motion for the density matrix is obtained for a two-band model, and the
properties of the solutions are analyzed. An expression for the current is
obtained. Finally, Zener-tunneling in a two-band tight-binding model is
considered. The present work gives the background and an extension of the
theoretical framework underlying our recent Letter [J. Rotvig {\it et al.},
Phys. Rev. Lett. {\bf 74}, 1831 (1995)], where a set of numerical simulations
were presented.Comment: 15 pages, Revtex 3.0, uses epsf, 2 ps figures attache
ac-Field-Controlled Anderson Localization in Disordered Semiconductor Superlattices
An ac field, tuned exactly to resonance with the Stark ladder in an ideal
tight binding lattice under strong dc bias, counteracts Wannier-Stark
localization and leads to the emergence of extended Floquet states. If there is
random disorder, these states localize. The localization lengths depend
non-monotonically on the ac field amplitude and become essentially zero at
certain parameters. This effect is of possible relevance for characterizing the
quality of superlattice samples, and for performing experiments on Anderson
localization in systems with well-defined disorder.Comment: 10 pages, Latex; figures available on request from [email protected]
Localization of interacting electrons in quantum dot arrays driven by an ac-field
We investigate the dynamics of two interacting electrons moving in a
one-dimensional array of quantum dots under the influence of an ac-field. We
show that the system exhibits two distinct regimes of behavior, depending on
the ratio of the strength of the driving field to the inter-electron Coulomb
repulsion. When the ac-field dominates, an effect termed coherent destruction
of tunneling occurs at certain frequencies, in which transport along the array
is suppressed. In the other, weak-driving, regime we find the surprising result
that the two electrons can bind into a single composite particle -- despite the
strong Coulomb repulsion between them -- which can then be controlled by the
ac-field in an analogous way. We show how calculation of the Floquet
quasienergies of the system explains these results, and thus how ac-fields can
be used to control the localization of interacting electron systems.Comment: 7 pages, 6 eps figures V2. Minor changes, this version to be
published in Phys. Rev.
Self-induced and induced transparencies of two-dimensional and three- dimensional superlattices
The phenomenon of transparency in two-dimensional and three-dimensional
superlattices is analyzed on the basis of the Boltzmann equation with a
collision term encompassing three distinct scattering mechanisms (elastic,
inelastic and electron-electron) in terms of three corresponding distinct
relaxation times. On this basis, we show that electron heating in the plane
perpendicular to the current direction drastically changes the conditions for
the occurrence of self-induced transparency in the superlattice. In particular,
it leads to an additional modulation of the current amplitudes excited by an
applied biharmonic electric field with harmonic components polarized in
orthogonal directions. Furthermore, we show that self-induced transparency and
dynamic localization are different phenomena with different physical origins,
displaced in time from each other, and, in general, they arise at different
electric fields.Comment: to appear in Physical Review
Perturbation theory for plasmonic eigenvalues
We develop a perturbative approach for calculating, within the quasistatic
approximation, the shift of surface resonances in response to a deformation of
a dielectric volume. Our strategy is based on the conversion of the homogeneous
system for the potential which determines the plasmonic eigenvalues into an
inhomogeneous system for the potential's derivative with respect to the
deformation strength, and on the exploitation of the corresponding
compatibility condition. The resulting general expression for the first-order
shift is verified for two explicitly solvable cases, and for a realistic
example of a deformed nanosphere. It can be used for scanning the huge
parameter space of possible shape fluctuations with only quite small
computational effort
Laser-Induced Above-Bandgap Transparency in GaAs
We report the observation of large () laser-induced above-bandgap
transparency in GaAs at room temperature. The induced transparency is present
only during the pulse width of the driving midinfrard laser pulses and its
spectral shape is consistent with a laser-induced blue shift of the band edge.
Our simulations based on the dynamic Franz-Keldysh effect reproduce the salient
features of the experimental results, demonstrating in particular that the
amount of the band edge shift is approximately given by the ponderomtive
potential.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Current oscillations in a metallic ring threaded by a time-dependent magnetic flux
We study a mesoscopic metallic ring threaded by a magnetic flux which varies
linearly in time PhiM(t)=Phi t with a formalism based in Baym-Kadanoff-Keldysh
non-equilibrium Green functions. We propose a method to calculate the Green
functions in real space and we consider an experimental setup to investigate
the dynamics of the ring by recourse to a transport experiment. This consists
in a single lead connecting the ring to a particle reservoir. We show that
different dynamical regimes are attained depending on the ratio hbar Phi/Phi0
W, being Phi0=h c/e and W, the bandwidth of the ring. For moderate lengths of
the ring, a stationary regime is achieved for hbar Phi/Phi0 >W. In the opposite
case with hbar Phi/Phi0 < W, the effect of Bloch oscillations driven by the
induced electric field manifests itself in the transport properties of the
system. In particular, we show that in this time-dependent regime a tunneling
current oscillating in time with a period tau=2piPhi0/Phi can be measured in
the lead. We also analyze the resistive effect introduced by inelastic
scattering due to the coupling to the external reservoir.Comment: 17 pages, 13 figure
- …
