208 research outputs found

    Propagation of quantum correlations after a quench in the Mott-insulator regime of the Bose-Hubbard model

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    We study a quantum quench in the Bose-Hubbard model where the tunneling rate JJ is suddenly switched from zero to a finite value in the Mott regime. In order to solve the many-body quantum dynamics far from equlibrium, we consider the reduced density matrices for a finite number (one, two, three, etc.) of lattice sites and split them up into on-site density operators, i.e., the mean field, plus two-point and three-point correlations etc. Neglecting three-point and higher correlations, we are able to numerically simulate the time-evolution of the few-site density matrices and the two-point quantum correlations (e.g., their effective light-cone structure) for a comparably large number O(103){\cal O}(10^3) of lattice sites

    Magnetically tuned spin dynamics resonance

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    We present the experimental observation of a magnetically tuned resonance phenomenon resulting from spin mixing dynamics of ultracold atomic gases. In particular we study the magnetic field dependence of spin conversion in F=2 87Rb spinor condensates in the crossover from interaction dominated to quadratic Zeeman dominated dynamics. We discuss the observed phenomenon in the framework of spin dynamics as well as matter wave four wave mixing. Furthermore we show that the validity range of the single mode approximation for spin dynamics is significantly extended in the regime of high magnetic field

    Emergence of coherence in the Mott--superfluid quench of the Bose-Hubbard model

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    We study the quench from the Mott to the superfluid phase in the Bose-Hubbard model and investigate the spatial-temporal growth of phase coherence, i.e., phase locking between initially uncorrelated sites. To this end, we establish a hierarchy of correlations via a controlled expansion into inverse powers of the coordination number 1/Z1/Z. It turns out that the off-diagonal long-range order spreads with a constant propagation speed, forming local condensate patches, whereas the phase correlator follows a diffusion-like growth rate.Comment: 4 page

    Cloning quantum entanglement in arbitrary dimensions

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    We have found a quantum cloning machine that optimally duplicates the entanglement of a pair of dd-dimensional quantum systems. It maximizes the entanglement of formation contained in the two copies of any maximally-entangled input state, while preserving the separability of unentangled input states. Moreover, it cannot increase the entanglement of formation of all isotropic states. For large dd, the entanglement of formation of each clone tends to one half the entanglement of the input state, which corresponds to a classical behavior. Finally, we investigate a local entanglement cloner, which yields entangled clones with one fourth the input entanglement in the large-dd limit.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure

    Spatial entanglement of twin quantum images

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    We show that the spatial entanglement of two twin images obtained by parametric down conversion is complete, i.e., concerns both amplitude and phase. By considering a homodyne detection scheme, which allows comparison of field quadrature components of the two images pixel by pixel, Einstein-Podolsky Rosen correlations are shown to exist between symmetrical pixels of the two images. The best possible correlation is obtained by adjusting the phase profile of the local oscillator in the amplification area. The results for quadrature components hold even in the absence of any input image, i.e., for pure parametric fluorescence. In this case, they are not related to intensity and phase fluctuations

    Secure Coherent-state Quantum Key Distribution Protocols with Efficient Reconciliation

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    We study the equivalence between a realistic quantum key distribution protocol using coherent states and homodyne detection and a formal entanglement purification protocol. Maximally-entangled qubit pairs that one can extract in the formal protocol correspond to secret key bits in the realistic protocol. More specifically, we define a qubit encoding scheme that allows the formal protocol to produce more than one entangled qubit pair per coherent state, or equivalently for the realistic protocol, more than one secret key bit. The entanglement parameters are estimated using quantum tomography. We analyze the properties of the encoding scheme and investigate its application to the important case of the attenuation channel.Comment: REVTeX, 11 pages, 2 figure
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