2,316 research outputs found
Shot noise spectrum of superradiant entangled excitons
The shot noise produced by tunneling of electrons and holes into a double dot
system incorporated inside a p-i-n junction is investigated theoretically. The
enhancement of the shot noise is shown to originate from the entangled
electron-hole pair created by superradiance. The analogy to the superconducting
cooper pair box is pointed out. A series of Zeno-like measurements is shown to
destroy the entanglement, except for the case of maximum entanglement.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, to appear in Phys. Rev. B (2004
Spatial Correlation Functions of one-dimensional Bose gases at Equilibrium
The dependence of the three lowest order spatial correlation functions of a
harmonically confined Bose gas on temperature and interaction strength is
presented at equilibrium. Our analysis is based on a stochastic Langevin
equation for the order parameter of a weakly-interacting gas. Comparison of the
predicted first order correlation functions to those of appropriate mean field
theories demonstrates the potentially crucial role of density fluctuations on
the equilibrium coherence length. Furthermore,the change in both coherence
length and shape of the correlation function, from gaussian to exponential,
with increasing temperature is quantified. Moreover, the presented results for
higher order correlation functions are shown to be in agreeement with existing
predictions. Appropriate consideration of density-density correlations is shown
to facilitate a precise determination of quasi-condensate density profiles,
providing an alternative approach to the bimodal density fits typically used
experimentally
Entanglement measurement of the quadrature components without the homodyne detection in the spatially multi-mode far-field
We consider the measuring procedure that in principle allows to avoid the
homodyne detection for the simultaneous selection of both quadrature components
in the far-field. The scheme is based on the use of the coherent sources of the
non-classical light. The possibilities of the procedure are illustrated on the
basis of the use of pixellised sources, where the phase-locked sub-Poissonian
lasers or the degenerate optical parametric oscillator generating above
threshold are chosen as the pixels. The theory of the pixellised source of the
spatio-temporal squeezed light is elaborated as a part of this investigation.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figures, RevTeX4. Submitted to Phys. Rev.
Signatures of the Unruh effect from electrons accelerated by ultra-strong laser fields
We calculate the radiation resulting from the Unruh effect for strongly
accelerated electrons and show that the photons are created in pairs whose
polarizations are maximally entangled. Apart from the photon statistics, this
quantum radiation can further be discriminated from the classical (Larmor)
radiation via the different spectral and angular distributions. The signatures
of the Unruh effect become significant if the external electromagnetic field
accelerating the electrons is not too far below the Schwinger limit and might
be observable with future facilities. Finally, the corrections due to the
birefringent nature of the QED vacuum at such ultra-high fields are discussed.
PACS: 04.62.+v, 12.20.Fv, 41.60.-m, 42.25.Lc.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur
Effect of Atomic Coherence on Absorption in Four-level Systems: an Analytical study
Absorption profile of a four-level ladder atomic system interacting with
three driving fields is studied perturbatively and analytical results are
presented. Numerical results where the driving field strengths are treated upto
all orders are presented. The absorption features is studied in two regimes, i)
the weak middle transition coupling, i.e.
and ii) the strong middle transition coupling
. In case i), it is shown that the ground state
absorption and the saturation characteristics of the population of level 2
reveal deviation due to the presence of upper level couplings. In particular,
the saturation curve for the population of level 2 shows a dip for . While the populations of levels 3 and 4 show a maxima when this
resonance condition is satisfied. Thus the resonance condition provides a
criterion for maximally populating the upper levels. A second order
perturbation calculation reveals the nature of this minima (maxima). In the
second case, I report two important features: a) Filtering of the Aulter-Townes
doublet in the three-peak absorption profile of the ground state, which is
achieved by detuning only the upper most coupling field, and b) control of
line-width by controlling the strength of the upper coupling fields. This
filtering technique coupled with the control of linewidth could prove to be
very useful for high resolution studies.Comment: 15 pages 12 figure
Quantum trajectory phase transitions in the micromaser
We study the dynamics of the single atom maser, or micromaser, by means of
the recently introduced method of thermodynamics of quantum jump trajectories.
We find that the dynamics of the micromaser displays multiple space-time phase
transitions, i.e., phase transitions in ensembles of quantum jump trajectories.
This rich dynamical phase structure becomes apparent when trajectories are
classified by dynamical observables that quantify dynamical activity, such as
the number of atoms that have changed state while traversing the cavity. The
space-time transitions can be either first-order or continuous, and are
controlled not just by standard parameters of the micromaser but also by
non-equilibrium "counting" fields. We discuss how the dynamical phase behavior
relates to the better known stationary state properties of the micromaser.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figure
Phase-Conjugated Inputs Quantum Cloning Machines
A quantum cloning machine is introduced that yields identical optimal
clones from replicas of a coherent state and replicas of its phase
conjugate. It also optimally produces phase-conjugated clones at no
cost. For well chosen input asymmetries , this machine is shown to
provide better cloning fidelities than the standard cloner. The
special cases of the optimal balanced cloner () and the optimal
measurement () are investigated.Comment: 4 pages (RevTex), 2 figure
Few-Body Bound Complexes in One-dimensional Dipolar Gases and Non-Destructive Optical Detection
We consider dipolar interactions between heteronuclear molecules in
low-dimensional geometries. The setup consists of two one-dimensional tubes. We
study the stability of possible few-body complexes in the regime of repulsive
intratube interaction, where the binding arises from intertube attraction. The
stable dimers, trimers, and tetramers are found and we discuss their properties
for both bosonic and fermionic molecules. To observe these complexes we propose
an optical non-destructive detection scheme that enables in-situ observation of
the creation and dissociation of the few-body complexes. A detailed description
of the expected signal of such measurements is given using the numerically
calculated wave functions of the bound states. We also discuss implications on
the many-body physics of dipolar systems in tubular geometries, as well as
experimental issues related to the external harmonic confinement along the tube
and the prospect of applying an in-tube optical lattice to increase the
effective dipole strength.Comment: 16 pages, 15 figures, published versio
Production of a sterile species via active-sterile mixing: an exactly solvable model
The production of a sterile species via active-sterile mixing in a thermal
medium is studied in an exactly solvable model. The \emph{exact} time evolution
of the sterile distribution function is determined by the dispersion relations
and damping rates for the quasiparticle modes. These depend on
\wtg = \Gamma_{aa}/2\Delta E, with the interaction rate of the
active species in absence of mixing and the oscillation frequency in
the medium without damping. \wtg \ll1,\wtg \gg 1 describe the weak and strong
damping limits respectively. For \wtg\ll1, \Gamma_1 = \Gamma_{aa}\cos^2\tm ;
\Gamma_{2}=\Gamma_{aa}\sin^2\tm where \tm is the mixing angle in the medium
and the sterile distribution function \emph{does not} obey a simple rate
equation. For \wtg \gg 1, and \Gamma_2 = \Gamma_{aa}
\sin^22\tm/4\wtg^2, is the sterile production rate. In this regime sterile
production is suppressed and the oscillation frequency \emph{vanishes} at an
MSW resonance, with a breakdown of adiabaticity. These are consequences of
quantum Zeno suppression. For active neutrinos with standard model interactions
the strong damping limit is \emph{only} available near an MSW resonance
\emph{if} with the vacuum mixing angle.
The full set of quantum kinetic equations for sterile production for arbitrary
\wtg are obtained from the quantum master equation. Cosmological resonant
sterile neutrino production is quantum Zeno suppressed relieving potential
uncertainties associated with the QCD phase transition.Comment: To appear in Phys. Rev.
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