3 research outputs found
Probing the Shape of Quantum Dots with Magnetic Fields
A tool for the identification of the shape of quantum dots is developed. By
preparing a two-electron quantum dot, the response of the low-lying excited
states to a homogeneous magnetic field, i.e. their spin and parity
oscillations, is studied for a large variety of dot shapes. For any geometric
configuration of the confinement we encounter characteristic spin singlet -
triplet crossovers. The magnetization is shown to be a complementary tool for
probing the shape of the dot.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figure
Collinear helium under periodic driving: stabilization of the asymmetric stretch orbit
The collinear eZe configuration of helium, with the electrons on opposite
sides of the nucleus, is studied in the presence of an external electromagnetic
(laser or microwave) field. We show that the classically unstable "asymmetric
stretch" orbit, on which doubly excited intrashell states of helium with
maximum interelectronic angle are anchored, can be stabilized by means of a
resonant driving where the frequency of the electromagnetic field equals the
frequency of Kepler-like oscillations along the orbit. A static magnetic field,
oriented parallel to the oscillating electric field of the driving, can be used
to enforce the stability of the configuration with respect to deviations from
collinearity. Quantum Floquet calculations within a collinear model of the
driven two-electron atom reveal the existence of nondispersive wave packets
localized on the stabilized asymmetric stretch orbit, for double excitations
corresponding to principal quantum numbers of the order of N > 10.Comment: 13 pages, 12 figure