538 research outputs found
Evaluación docente dinámica, mediante gamificación, con una nueva aplicación en cloud de respuesta en el aula para dispositivos móviles con acceso a internet
UCMSección Deptal. de Farmacología y Toxicología (Veterinaria)Fac. de VeterinariaFALSEsubmitte
Quantum theory of collective strong coupling of molecular vibrations with a microcavity mode
We develop a quantum mechanical formalism to treat the strong coupling
between an electromagnetic mode and a vibrational excitation of an ensemble of
organic molecules. By employing a Bloch-Redfield-Wangsness approach, we show
that the influence of dephasing-type interactions, i.e., elastic collisions
with a background bath of phonons, critically depends on the nature of the bath
modes. In particular, for long-range phonons corresponding to a common bath,
the dynamics of the "bright state" (the collective superposition of molecular
vibrations coupling to the cavity mode) is effectively decoupled from other
system eigenstates. For the case of independent baths (or short-range phonons),
incoherent energy transfer occurs between the bright state and the uncoupled
dark states. However, these processes are suppressed when the Rabi splitting is
larger than the frequency range of the bath modes, as achieved in a recent
experiment [Shalabney et al., Nat. Commun. 6, 5981 (2015)]. In both cases, the
dynamics can thus be described through a single collective oscillator coupled
to a photonic mode, making this system an ideal candidate to explore cavity
optomechanics at room temperature.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figure
Dynamical gauge fields with bosonic codes
The quantum simulation of dynamical gauge field theories offers the
opportunity to study complex high-energy physics with controllable low-energy
devices. For quantum computation, bosonic codes promise robust error correction
that exploits multi-particle redundancy in bosons. In this Letter, we
demonstrate how bosonic codes can be used to simulate dynamical gauge fields.
We encode both matter and dynamical gauge fields in a network of resonators
that are coupled via three-wave-mixing. The mapping to a
dynamical lattice gauge theory is established when the gauge resonators operate
as Schr\"odinger cat states. We explore the optimal conditions under which the
system preserves the required gauge symmetries. Our findings promote realising
high-energy models using bosonic codes.Comment: Includes Supplemental Materia
Comparing nonlinear optomechanical coupling in membrane-in-the-middle and single-cavity optomechanical systems
In cavity optomechanics, nonlinear interactions between an optical field and
a mechanical resonator mode enable a variety of unique effects in classical and
quantum measurement and information processing. Here, we describe nonlinear
optomechanical coupling in the membrane-in-the-middle (MIM) setup in a way that
allows direct comparison to the intrinsic optomechanical nonlinearity in a
standard, single-cavity optomechanical system. We find that the enhancement of
nonlinear optomechanical coupling in the MIM system as predicted by Ludwig et
al. arXiv:1202.0532 is limited to the degree of sideband resolution of the
system. Moreover, we show that the selectivity of the MIM system of nonlinear
over linear transduction has the same limit as in a single cavity system. These
findings put constraints on the experiments in which it is advantageous to use
a MIM system. We discuss dynamical backaction effects in this system and find
that these effects per cavity photon are exactly as strong as in a single
cavity system, while allowing for reduction of the required input power. We
propose using the nonlinear enhancement and reduced input power in realistic
MIM systems towards parametric squeezing and heralding of phonon pairs, and
evaluate the limits to the magnitude of both effects
Entanglement detection in coupled particle plasmons
When in close contact, plasmonic resonances interact and become strongly
correlated. In this work we develop a quantum mechanical model, using the
language of continuous variables and quantum information, for an array of
coupled particle plasmons. This model predicts that when the coupling strength
between plasmons approaches or surpasses the local dissipation, a sizable
amount of entanglement is stored in the collective modes of the array. We also
prove that entanglement manifests itself in far-field images of the plasmonic
modes, through the statistics of the quadratures of the field, in what
constitutes a novel family of entanglement witnesses. This protocol is so
robust that it is indeed independent of whether our own model is correct.
Finally, we estimate the amount of entanglement, the coupling strength and the
correlation properties for a system that consists of two or more coupled
nanospheres of silver, showing evidence that our predictions could be tested
using present-day state-of-the-art technology.Comment: 8 pages (6 main text + 2 supplemental), 3 figure
Non-Hermitian chiral phononics through optomechanically-induced squeezing
Imposing chirality on a physical system engenders unconventional energy flow
and responses, such as the Aharonov-Bohm effect and the topological quantum
Hall phase for electrons in a symmetry-breaking magnetic field. Recently, great
interest has arisen in combining that principle with broken Hermiticity to
explore novel topological phases and applications. Here, we report unique
phononic states formed when combining the controlled breaking of time-reversal
symmetry with non-Hermitian dynamics, both induced through time-modulated
radiation pressure forces in small nano-optomechanical networks. We observe
chiral energy flow among mechanical resonators in a synthetic dimension and
Aharonov-Bohm tuning of their hybridised modes. Introducing
particle-non-conserving squeezing interactions, we discover a non-Hermitian
Aharonov-Bohm effect in ring-shaped networks in which mechanical quasiparticles
experience parametric gain. The resulting nontrivial complex mode spectra
indicate flux-tuning of squeezing, exceptional points, instabilities and
unidirectional phononic amplification. This rich new phenomenology points the
way to the exploration of new non-Hermitian topological bosonic phases and
applications in sensing and transport that exploit spatiotemporal symmetry
breaking.Comment: Included Main body and Methods (19 pages, 12 figures), in addition to
the Supplementary Information document (13 pages, 5 figures
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