58 research outputs found
Entanglement in the interaction between two quantum oscillator systems
The fundamental quantum dynamics of two interacting oscillator systems are
studied in two different scenarios. In one case, both oscillators are assumed
to be linear, whereas in the second case, one oscillator is linear and the
other is a non-linear, angular-momentum oscillator; the second case is, of
course, more complex in terms of energy transfer and dynamics. These two
scenarios have been the subject of much interest over the years, especially in
developing an understanding of modern concepts in quantum optics and quantum
electronics. In this work, however, these two scenarios are utilized to
consider and discuss the salient features of quantum behaviors resulting from
the interactive nature of the two oscillators, i.e., coherence, entanglement,
spontaneous emission, etc., and to apply a measure of entanglement in analyzing
the nature of the interacting systems. ... For the coupled linear and
angular-momentum oscillator system in the fully quantum-mechanical description,
we consider special examples of two, three, four-level angular momentum
systems, demonstrating the explicit appearances of entanglement. We also show
that this entanglement persists even as the coupled angular momentum oscillator
is taken to the limit of a large number of levels, a limit which would go over
to the classical picture for an uncoupled angular momentum oscillator
Thermal Properties of an Inflationary Universe
An energetic justification of a thermal component during inflation is given.
The thermal component can act as a heat reservoir which induces thermal
fluctuations on the inflaton field system. We showed previously that such
thermal fluctuations could dominate quantum fluctuations in producing the
initial seeds of density perturbations. A Langevin-like rate equation is
derived from quantum field theory which describes the production of
fluctuations in the inflaton field when acted upon by a simple modeled heat
reservoir. In a certain limit this equation is shown to reduce to the standard
Langevin equation, which we used to construct "Warm Inflation" scenarios in
previous work. A particle physics interpretation of our system-reservoir model
is offered.Comment: 28 pages, 0 figures, In Press Physical Review D 199
Thermalized Displaced and Squeezed Number States in Coordinate Representation
Within the framework of thermofield dynamics, the wavefunctions of the
thermalized displaced number and squeezed number states are given in the
coordinate representation. Furthermore, the time evolution of these
wavefunctions is considered by introducing a thermal coordinate representation,
and we also calculate the corresponding probability densities, average values
and variances of position coordinate, which are consistent with results in the
literature.Comment: 12 pages, no figures, Revtex. v3: substantially revise
Radiative energy shifts of accelerated atoms
We consider the influence of acceleration on the radiative energy shifts of
atoms in Minkowski space. We study a two-level atom coupled to a scalar quantum
field. Using a Heisenberg picture approach, we are able to separate the
contributions of vacuum fluctuations and radiation reaction to the Lamb shift
of the two-level atom. The resulting energy shifts for the special case of a
uniformly accelerated atom are then compared with those of an atom at rest.Comment: 12 pages, Latex, 1 figure as uuencoded eps file, shorter version will
appear in Phys. Rev.
Path Integrals and Their Application to Dissipative Quantum Systems
Introduction
Path Integrals
- Introduction
- Propagator
- Free Particle
- Path Integral Representation of Quantum Mechanics
- Particle on a Ring
- Particle in a Box
- Driven Harmonic Oscillator
- Semiclassical Approximation
- Imaginary Time Path Integral
Dissipative Systems
- Introduction
- Environment as Collection of Harmonic Oscillators
- Effective Action
Damped Harmonic Oscillator
- Partition Function
- Ground State Energy and Density of States
- Position Autocorrelation FunctionComment: 55 pages, 13 figures. To be published in "Coherent Evolution in Noisy
Environments", Lecture Notes in Physics
(http://link.springer.de/series/lnpp/) (Springer Verlag,
Berlin-Heidelberg-New York
Perspectives for a mixed two-qubit system with binomial quantum states
The problem of the relationship between entanglement and two-qubit systems in
which it is embedded is central to the quantum information theory. This paper
suggests that the concurrence hierarchy as an entanglement measure provides an
alternative view of how to think about this problem. We consider mixed states
of two qubits and obtain an exact solution of the time-dependent master
equation that describes the evolution of two two-level qubits (or atoms) within
a perfect cavity for the case of multiphoton transition. We consider the
situation for which the field may start from a binomial state. Employing this
solution, the significant features of the entanglement when a second qubit is
weakly coupled to the field and becomes entangled with the first qubit, is
investigated. We also describe the response of the atomic system as it varies
between the Rabi oscillations and the collapse-revival mode and investigate the
atomic inversion and the Q-function. We identify and numerically demonstrate
the region of parameters where significantly large entanglement can be
obtained. Most interestingly, it is shown that features of the entanglement is
influenced significantly when the multi-photon process is involved. Finally, we
obtain illustrative examples of some novel aspects of this system and show how
the off-resonant case can sensitize entanglement to the role of initial state
setting.Comment: 18 pages, 9 figure
Spontaneous excitation of an accelerated atom: The contributions of vacuum fluctuations and radiation reaction
We consider an atom in interaction with a massless scalar quantum field. We
discuss the structure of the rate of variation of the atomic energy for an
arbitrary stationary motion of the atom through the quantum vacuum. Our main
intention is to identify and to analyze quantitatively the distinct
contributions of vacuum fluctuations and radiation reaction to the spontaneous
excitation of a uniformly accelerated atom in its ground state. This gives an
understanding of the role of the different physical processes underlying the
Unruh effect. The atom's evolution into equilibrium and the Einstein
coefficients for spontaneous excitation and spontaneous emission are
calculated.Comment: 13 pages, KONS-RGKU-94-09, to appear in Phys. Rev.
Coupling Classical and Quantum Variables using Continuous Quantum Measurement Theory
We propose a system of equations to describe the interaction of a
quasiclassical variable with a set of quantum variables that goes
beyond the usual mean field approximation. The idea is to regard the quantum
system as continuously and imprecisely measured by the classical system. The
effective equations of motion for the classical system therefore consist of
treating the quantum variable as a stochastic c-number \x (t) the
probability distibution for which is given by the theory of continuous quantum
measurements. The resulting theory is similar to the usual mean field equations
(in which is replaced by its quantum expectation value) but with two
differences: a noise term, and more importantly, the state of the quantum
subsystem evolves according to the stochastic non-linear Schrodinger equation
of a continuously measured system. In the case in which the quantum system
starts out in a superposition of well-separated localized states, the classical
system goes into a statistical mixture of trajectories, one trajectory for each
individual localized state.Comment: 11 pages, plain Tex (with revised settings for \vsize and \voffset to
accommodate US paper sizes
Quantum System under Periodic Perturbation: Effect of Environment
In many physical situations the behavior of a quantum system is affected by
interaction with a larger environment. We develop, using the method of
influence functional, how to deduce the density matrix of the quantum system
incorporating the effect of environment. After introducing characterization of
the environment by spectral weight, we first devise schemes to approximate the
spectral weight, and then a perturbation method in field theory models, in
order to approximately describe the environment. All of these approximate
models may be classified as extended Ohmic models of dissipation whose
differences are in the high frequency part.
The quantum system we deal with in the present work is a general class of
harmonic oscillators with arbitrary time dependent frequency. The late time
behavior of the system is well described by an approximation that employs a
localized friction in the dissipative part of the correlation function
appearing in the influence functional. The density matrix of the quantum system
is then determined in terms of a single classical solution obtained with the
time dependent frequency. With this one can compute the entropy, the energy
distribution function, and other physical quantities of the system in a closed
form.
Specific application is made to the case of periodically varying frequency.
This dynamical system has a remarkable property when the environmental
interaction is switched off: Effect of the parametric resonance gives rise to
an exponential growth of the populated number in higher excitation levels, or
particle production in field theory models. The effect of the environment is
investigated for this dynamical system and it is demonstrated that there existsComment: 55 pages, LATEX file plus 13 PS figures. A few calculational
mistatkes and corresponding figure 1 in field theory model corrected and some
changes made for publication in Phys. Rev.D (in press
Effective Theories of Coupled Classical and Quantum Variables
We address the issue of coupling variables which are essentially classical to
variables that are quantum. Two approaches are discussed. In the first (based
on collaborative work with L.Di\'osi), continuous quantum measurement theory is
used to construct a phenomenological description of the interaction of a
quasiclassical variable with a quantum variable , where the
quasiclassical nature of is assumed to have come about as a result of
decoherence. The state of the quantum subsystem evolves according to the
stochastic non-linear Schr\"odinger equation of a continuously measured system,
and the classical system couples to a stochastic c-number \x (t) representing
the imprecisely measured value of . The theory gives intuitively sensible
results even when the quantum system starts out in a superposition of
well-separated localized states. The second approach involves a derivation of
an effective theory from the underlying quantum theory of the combined
quasiclassical--quantum system, and uses the decoherent histories approach to
quantum theory.Comment: 25 pages, plain Tex. To appear in proceedings of the conference Open
Systems and Measurement in Relativistic Quantum Theory, Naples, April 3-4,
1998, edited by H.P.Breuer and F.Petruccion
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