849 research outputs found
Barrier transmission for the one-dimensional nonlinear Schr\"odinger equation: resonances and transmission profiles
The stationary nonlinear Schr\"odinger equation (or Gross-Pitaevskii
equation) for one-dimensional potential scattering is studied. The nonlinear
transmission function shows a distorted profile, which differs from the
Lorentzian one found in the linear case. This nonlinear profile function is
analyzed and related to Siegert type complex resonances. It is shown, that the
characteristic nonlinear profile function can be conveniently described in
terms of skeleton functions depending on a few instructive parameters. These
skeleton functions also determine the decay behavior of the underlying
resonance state. Furthermore we extend the Siegert method for calculating
resonances, which provides a convenient recipe for calculating nonlinear
resonances. Applications to a double Gaussian barrier and a square well
potential illustrate our analysis.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures, 1 tabl
Chaotic Quantum Decay in Driven Biased Optical Lattices
Quantum decay in an ac driven biased periodic potential modeling cold atoms
in optical lattices is studied for a symmetry broken driving. For the case of
fully chaotic classical dynamics the classical exponential decay is quantum
mechanically suppressed for a driving frequency \omega in resonance with the
Bloch frequency \omega_B, q\omega=r\omega_B with integers q and r.
Asymptotically an algebraic decay ~t^{-\gamma} is observed. For r=1 the
exponent \gamma agrees with as predicted by non-Hermitian random matrix
theory for q decay channels. The time dependence of the survival probability
can be well described by random matrix theory. The frequency dependence of the
survival probability shows pronounced resonance peaks with sub-Fourier
character.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figure
Beyond mean-field dynamics of small Bose-Hubbard systems based on the number-conserving phase space approach
The number-conserving quantum phase space description of the Bose-Hubbard
model is discussed for the illustrative case of two and three modes, as well as
the generalization of the two-mode case to an open quantum system. The
phase-space description based on generalized SU(M) coherent states yields a
Liouvillian flow in the macroscopic limit, which can be efficiently simulated
using Monte Carlo methods even for large systems. We show that this description
clearly goes beyond the common mean-field limit. In particular it resolves
well-known problems where the common mean-field approach fails, like the
description of dynamical instabilities and chaotic dynamics. Moreover, it
provides a valuable tool for a semi-classical approximation of many interesting
quantities, which depend on higher moments of the quantum state and are
therefore not accessible within the common approach. As a prominent example, we
analyse the depletion and heating of the condensate. A comparison to methods
ignoring the fixed particle number shows that in this case artificial number
fluctuations lead to ambiguities and large deviations even for quite simple
examples.Comment: Significantly enhanced and revised version (20 pages, 20 figures
Quantum transport and localization in biased periodic structures under bi- and polychromatic driving
We consider the dynamics of a quantum particle in a one-dimensional periodic
potential (lattice) under the action of a static and time-periodic field. The
analysis is based on a nearest-neighbor tight-binding model which allows a
convenient closed form description of the transport properties in terms of
generalized Bessel functions. The case of bichromatic driving is analyzed in
detail and the intricate transport and localization phenomena depending on the
communicability of the two excitation frequencies and the Bloch frequency are
discussed. The case of polychromatic driving is also discussed, in particular
for flipped static fields, i.e. rectangular pulses, which can support an almost
dispersionless transport with a velocity independent of the field amplitude.Comment: 18 pages, 11 figur
Resonance solutions of the nonlinear Schr\"odinger equation in an open double-well potential
The resonance states and the decay dynamics of the nonlinear Schr\"odinger
(or Gross-Pitaevskii) equation are studied for a simple, however flexible model
system, the double delta-shell potential. This model allows analytical
solutions and provides insight into the influence of the nonlinearity on the
decay dynamics. The bifurcation scenario of the resonance states is discussed,
as well as their dynamical stability properties. A discrete approximation using
a biorthogonal basis is suggested which allows an accurate description even for
only two basis states in terms of a nonlinear, nonhermitian matrix problem.Comment: 21 pages, 14 figure
Quasiclassical analysis of Bloch oscillations in non-Hermitian tight-binding lattices
Many features of Bloch oscillations in one-dimensional quantum lattices with
a static force can be described by quasiclassical considerations for example by
means of the acceleration theorem, at least for Hermitian systems. Here the
quasiclassical approach is extended to non-Hermitian lattices, which are of
increasing interest. The analysis is based on a generalised non-Hermitian phase
space dynamics developed recently. Applications to a single-band tight-binding
system demonstrate that many features of the quantum dynamics can be understood
from this classical description qualitatively and even quantitatively. Two
non-Hermitian and -symmetric examples are studied, a Hatano-Nelson lattice
with real coupling constants and a system with purely imaginary couplings, both
for initially localised states in space or in momentum. It is shown that the
time-evolution of the norm of the wave packet and the expectation values of
position and momentum can be described in a classical picture.Comment: 20 pages, 8 figures, typos corrected, slightly extended, accepted for
publication in New Journal of Physics in Focus Issue on Parity-Time Symmetry
in Optics and Photonic
Wannier-Stark resonances in optical and semiconductor superlattices
In this work, we discuss the resonance states of a quantum particle in a
periodic potential plus a static force. Originally this problem was formulated
for a crystal electron subject to a static electric field and it is nowadays
known as the Wannier-Stark problem. We describe a novel approach to the
Wannier-Stark problem developed in recent years. This approach allows to
compute the complex energy spectrum of a Wannier-Stark system as the poles of a
rigorously constructed scattering matrix and solves the Wannier-Stark problem
without any approximation. The suggested method is very efficient from the
numerical point of view and has proven to be a powerful analytic tool for
Wannier-Stark resonances appearing in different physical systems such as
optical lattices or semiconductor superlattices.Comment: 94 pages, 41 figures, typos corrected, references adde
- …