28,567 research outputs found
Overlapping resonances in the control of intramolecular vibrational redistribution
Coherent control of bound state processes via the interfering overlapping
resonances scenario [Christopher et al., J. Chem. Phys. 123, 064313 (2006)] is
developed to control intramolecular vibrational redistribution (IVR). The
approach is applied to the flow of population between bonds in a model of
chaotic OCS vibrational dynamics, showing the ability to significantly alter
the extent and rate of IVR by varying quantum interference contributions.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figure
The Born and Lens-Lens Corrections to Weak Gravitational Lensing Angular Power Spectra
We revisit the estimation of higher order corrections to the angular power
spectra of weak gravitational lensing. Extending a previous calculation of
Cooray and Hu, we find two additional terms to the fourth order in potential
perturbations of large-scale structure corresponding to corrections associated
with the Born approximation and the neglect of line-of-sight coupling of two
foreground lenses in the standard first order result. These terms alter the
convergence (), the lensing shear E-mode (),
and their cross-correlation () power spectra on large angular
scales, but leave the power spectra of the lensing shear B-mode ()
and rotational () component unchanged as compared to previous
estimates. The new terms complete the calculation of corrections to weak
lensing angular power spectra associated with both the Born approximation and
the lens-lens coupling to an order in which the contributions are most
significant. Taking these features together, we find that these corrections are
unimportant for any weak lensing survey, including for a full sky survey
limited by cosmic variance.Comment: Added references, minor changes to text. 9 pages, 2 figure
Adaptive phase estimation is more accurate than non-adaptive phase estimation for continuous beams of light
We consider the task of estimating the randomly fluctuating phase of a
continuous-wave beam of light. Using the theory of quantum parameter
estimation, we show that this can be done more accurately when feedback is used
(adaptive phase estimation) than by any scheme not involving feedback
(non-adaptive phase estimation) in which the beam is measured as it arrives at
the detector. Such schemes not involving feedback include all those based on
heterodyne detection or instantaneous canonical phase measurements. We also
demonstrate that the superior accuracy adaptive phase estimation is present in
a regime conducive to observing it experimentally.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figures, submitted to PR
Skeletally Dugundji spaces
We introduce and investigate the class of skeletally Dugundji spaces as a
skeletal analogue of Dugundji space. The main result states that the following
conditions are equivalent for a given space : (i) is skeletally
Dugundji; (ii) Every compactification of is co-absolute to a Dugundji
space; (iii) Every -embedding of the absolute in another space is
strongly -regular; (iv) has a multiplicative lattice in the sense of
Shchepin \cite{s76} consisting of skeletal maps
Two-mode heterodyne phase detection
We present an experimental scheme that achieves ideal phase detection on a
two-mode field. The two modes and are the signal and image band modes
of an heterodyne detector, with the field approaching an eigenstate of the
photocurrent . The field is obtained by means of a
high-gain phase-insensitive amplifier followed by a high-transmissivity
beam-splitter with a strong local oscillator at the frequency of one of the two
modes.Comment: 3 pages, 1 figur
Bulk Viscosity in Neutron Stars from Hyperons
The contribution from hyperons to the bulk viscosity of neutron star matter
is calculated. Compared to previous works we use for the weak interaction the
one-pion exchange model rather than a current-current interaction, and include
the neutral current process. Also the sensitivity
to details of the equation of state is examined. Compared to previous works we
find that the contribution from hyperons to the bulk viscosity is about two
orders of magnitude smaller.Comment: 18 pages, to appear in Physical Review
Scaling of the conductance distribution near the Anderson transition
The single parameter scaling hypothesis is the foundation of our
understanding of the Anderson transition. However, the conductance of a
disordered system is a fluctuating quantity which does not obey a one parameter
scaling law. It is essential to investigate the scaling of the full conductance
distribution to establish the scaling hypothesis. We present a clear cut
numerical demonstration that the conductance distribution indeed obeys one
parameter scaling near the Anderson transition
Aspects of quantum coherence in the optical Bloch equations
Aspects of coherence and decoherence are analyzed within the optical Bloch
equations. By rewriting the analytic solution in an alternate form, we are able
to emphasize a number of unusual features: (a) despite the Markovian nature of
the bath, coherence at long times can be retained; (b) the long-time asymptotic
degree of coherence in the system is intertwined with the asymptotic difference
in level populations; (c) the traditional population-relaxation and decoherence
times, and , lose their meaning when the system is in the presence
of an external field, and are replaced by more general overall timescales; (d)
increasing the field strength, quantified by the Rabi frequency, ,
increases the rate of decoherence rather than reducing it, as one might expect;
and (e) maximum asymptotic coherence is reached when the system parameters
satisfy .Comment: 18 pages, 6 figures; to appear in J Chem Phy
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