6,148 research outputs found
Stability and structure of two coupled boson systems in an external field
The lowest adiabatic potential expressed in hyperspherical coordinates is
estimated for two boson systems in an external harmonic trap. Corresponding
conditions for stability are investigated and the related structures are
extracted for zero-range interactions. Strong repulsion between non-identical
particles leads to two new features, respectively when identical particles
attract or repel each other. For repulsion new stable structures arise with
displaced center of masses. For attraction the mean-field stability region is
restricted due to motion of the center of masses
Multi-particle entanglement of hot trapped ions
We propose an efficient method to produce multi-particle entangled states of
ions in an ion trap for which a wide range of interesting effects and
applications have been suggested. Our preparation scheme exploits the
collective vibrational motion of the ions, but it works in such a way that this
motion need not be fully controlled in the experiment. The ions may, e.g., be
in thermal motion and exchange mechanical energy with a surrounding heat bath
without detrimental effects on the internal state preparation. Our scheme does
not require access to the individual ions in the trap.Comment: 4 pages, including 3 figures. To appear in Phys. Rev. Lett. This
paper previously appeared under the name "Schrodingers cat in a hot trap".
The paper has been revised according to Phys. Rev. policy on Schrodinger
cats. No cats were harmed during the production of this manuscrip
Genetic Improvement of Livestock for Organic Farming Systems
Organic farming which experienced a constant rise over the last two decades is a system based on sustainability and on a concept tending towards functional integrity. Legislation as well as the wish to produce separately from conventional farming raise the question whether organic farming should be conducted completely apart from conventional farming or not. This paper discusses the aspects that affect animal breeding under these circumstances, e.g., maintaining genetic diversity by using local breeds and possible G×E interactions which might occur when breeds adapted to conventional farming systems are used in organic farming. Ways of modelling G×E are presented, moreover examples of G×E in dairy cattle, swine, and poultry are given. Trends in selection index theory–designing multi-trait breeding goals including functional traits on one hand, and developing methods for using customised selection indices on the other hand–support breeding work for organic farming systems. It is concluded that before the technical issues can be addressed, all parties involved, farmers, consumers as well as legislators, have to agree on the socio-cultural conditions under which organic farming should be conducted
Bayesian analysis of the linear reaction norm model with unknown covariate
The reaction norm model is becoming a popular approach for the analysis of G x E interactions. In a classical reaction norm model, the expression of a genotype in different environments is described as a linear function (a reaction norm) of an environmental gradient or value. A common environmental value is defined as the mean performance of all genotypes in the environment, which is typically unknown. One approximation is to estimate the mean phenotypic performance in each environment, and then treat these estimates as known covariates in the model. However, a more satisfactory alternative is to infer environmental values simultaneously with the other parameters of the model. This study describes a method and its Bayesian MCMC implementation that makes this possible. Frequentist properties of the proposed method are tested in a simulation study. Estimates of parameters of interest agree well with the true values. Further, inferences about genetic parameters from the proposed method are similar to those derived from a reaction norm model using true environmental values. On the other hand, using phenotypic means as proxies for environmental values results in poor inferences
Effective Hamiltonian Theory and Its Applications in Quantum Information
This paper presents a useful compact formula for deriving an effective
Hamiltonian describing the time-averaged dynamics of detuned quantum systems.
The formalism also works for ensemble-averaged dynamics of stochastic systems.
To illustrate the technique we give examples involving Raman processes,
Bloch-Siegert shifts and Quantum Logic Gates.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, to be published in Canadian Journal of Physic
Structure of boson systems beyond the mean-field
We investigate systems of identical bosons with the focus on two-body
correlations. We use the hyperspherical adiabatic method and a decomposition of
the wave function in two-body amplitudes. An analytic parametrization is used
for the adiabatic effective radial potential. We discuss the structure of a
condensate for arbitrary scattering length. Stability and time scales for
various decay processes are estimated. The previously predicted Efimov-like
states are found to be very narrow. We discuss the validity conditions and
formal connections between the zero- and finite-range mean-field
approximations, Faddeev-Yakubovskii formulation, Jastrow ansatz, and the
present method. We compare numerical results from present work with mean-field
calculations and discuss qualitatively the connection with measurements.Comment: 26 pages, 6 figures, submitted to J. Phys. B. Ver. 2 is 28 pages with
modified figures and discussion
Bogoliubov theory of entanglement in a Bose-Einstein condensate
We consider a Bose-Einstein condensate which is illuminated by a short
resonant light pulse that coherently couples two internal states of the atoms.
We show that the subsequent time evolution prepares the atoms in an interesting
entangled state called a spin squeezed state. This evolution is analysed in
detail by developing a Bogoliubov theory which describes the entanglement of
the atoms. Our calculation is a consistent expansion in , where
is the number of particles in the condensate, and our theory predict that it is
possible to produce spin squeezing by at least a factor of . Within
the Bogoliubov approximation this result is independent of temperature.Comment: 14 pages, including 5 figures, minor changes in the presentatio
Stability of atomic clocks based on entangled atoms
We analyze the effect of realistic noise sources for an atomic clock
consisting of a local oscillator that is actively locked to a spin-squeezed
(entangled) ensemble of atoms. We show that the use of entangled states can
lead to an improvement of the long-term stability of the clock when the
measurement is limited by decoherence associated with instability of the local
oscillator combined with fluctuations in the atomic ensemble's Bloch vector.
Atomic states with a moderate degree of entanglement yield the maximal clock
stability, resulting in an improvement that scales as compared to the
atomic shot noise level.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, revtex
Dissipative production of a maximally entangled steady state
Entangled states are a key resource in fundamental quantum physics, quantum
cryp-tography, and quantum computation [1].To date, controlled unitary
interactions applied to a quantum system, so-called "quantum gates", have been
the most widely used method to deterministically create entanglement [2]. These
processes require high-fidelity state preparation as well as minimizing the
decoherence that inevitably arises from coupling between the system and the
environment and imperfect control of the system parameters. Here, on the
contrary, we combine unitary processes with engineered dissipation to
deterministically produce and stabilize an approximate Bell state of two
trapped-ion qubits independent of their initial state. While previous works
along this line involved the application of sequences of multiple
time-dependent gates [3] or generated entanglement of atomic ensembles
dissipatively but relied on a measurement record for steady-state entanglement
[4], we implement the process in a continuous time-independent fashion,
analogous to optical pumping of atomic states. By continuously driving the
system towards steady-state, the entanglement is stabilized even in the
presence of experimental noise and decoherence. Our demonstration of an
entangled steady state of two qubits represents a step towards dissipative
state engineering, dissipative quantum computation, and dissipative phase
transitions [5-7]. Following this approach, engineered coupling to the
environment may be applied to a broad range of experimental systems to achieve
desired quantum dynamics or steady states. Indeed, concurrently with this work,
an entangled steady state of two superconducting qubits was demonstrated using
dissipation [8].Comment: 25 pages, 5 figure
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