15,247 research outputs found
Quantum Spin Dynamics with Pairwise-Tunable, Long-Range Interactions
We present a platform for the simulation of quantum magnetism with full
control of interactions between pairs of spins at arbitrary distances in one-
and two-dimensional lattices. In our scheme, two internal atomic states
represent a pseudo-spin for atoms trapped within a photonic crystal waveguide
(PCW). With the atomic transition frequency aligned inside a band gap of the
PCW, virtual photons mediate coherent spin-spin interactions between lattice
sites. To obtain full control of interaction coefficients at arbitrary
atom-atom separations, ground-state energy shifts are introduced as a function
of distance across the PCW. In conjunction with auxiliary pump fields,
spin-exchange versus atom-atom separation can be engineered with arbitrary
magnitude and phase, and arranged to introduce non-trivial Berry phases in the
spin lattice, thus opening new avenues for realizing novel topological spin
models. We illustrate the broad applicability of our scheme by explicit
construction for several well known spin models.Comment: 18 pages, 10 figure
Quantum many-body models with cold atoms coupled to photonic crystals
Using cold atoms to simulate strongly interacting quantum systems represents
an exciting frontier of physics. However, as atoms are nominally neutral point
particles, this limits the types of interactions that can be produced. We
propose to use the powerful new platform of cold atoms trapped near
nanophotonic systems to extend these limits, enabling a novel quantum material
in which atomic spin degrees of freedom, motion, and photons strongly couple
over long distances. In this system, an atom trapped near a photonic crystal
seeds a localized, tunable cavity mode around the atomic position. We find that
this effective cavity facilitates interactions with other atoms within the
cavity length, in a way that can be made robust against realistic
imperfections. Finally, we show that such phenomena should be accessible using
one-dimensional photonic crystal waveguides in which coupling to atoms has
already been experimentally demonstrated
Superradiance for atoms trapped along a photonic crystal waveguide
We report observations of superradiance for atoms trapped in the near field
of a photonic crystal waveguide (PCW). By fabricating the PCW with a band edge
near the D transition of atomic cesium, strong interaction is achieved
between trapped atoms and guided-mode photons. Following short-pulse
excitation, we record the decay of guided-mode emission and find a superradiant
emission rate scaling as for average atom number atoms, where
is the peak single-atom radiative decay
rate into the PCW guided mode and is the Einstein- coefficient
for free space. These advances provide new tools for investigations of
photon-mediated atom-atom interactions in the many-body regime.Comment: 11 pages, 10 figure
Highly Sensitive Centrality Dependence of Elliptic Flow -- A Novel Signature of the Phase Transition in QCD
Elliptic flow of the hot, dense system which has been created in
nucleus-nucleus collisions develops as a response to the initial azimuthal
asymmetry of the reaction region. Here it is suggested that the magnitude of
this response shows a ``kinky'' dependence on the centrality of collisions for
which the system passes through a first-order or rapid transition between
quark-gluon plasma and hadronic matter. We have studied the system Pb(158AGeV)
on Pb employing a recent version of the transport theoretical approach RQMD and
find the conjecture confirmed. The novel phase transition signature may be
observable in present and forthcoming experiments at CERN-SPS and at RHIC, the
BNL collider.Comment: Version as published in PRL 82 (1999) 2048, title chang
The Evolution of Diffuse Radio Sources in Galaxy Clusters
We investigate the evolution and number distribution of radio halos in galaxy
clusters. Without re-acceleration or regeneration, the relativistic electrons
responsible for the diffuse radio emission will lose their energy via
inverse-Compton and synchrotron losses in a rather short time, and radio halos
will have lifetimes 0.1 Gyr. Radio halos could last for Gyr if a
significant level of re-acceleration is involved. The lifetimes of radio halos
would be comparable with the cosmological time if the radio-emitting electrons
are mainly the secondary electrons generated by pion decay following
proton-proton collisions between cosmic-ray protons and the thermal
intra-cluster medium within the galaxy clusters. Adopting both observational
and theoretical constraints for the formation of radio halos, we calculate the
formation rates and the comoving number density of radio halos in the
hierarchical clustering scheme. Comparing with observations, we find that the
lifetimes of radio halos are Gyr. Our results indicate that a
significant level of re-acceleration is necessary for the observed radio halos
and the secondary electrons may not be a dominant origin for radio halos.Comment: 22 pages, 6 figures, ApJ, in press (v2:Corrected typos.
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