11,445 research outputs found
Redundancy of classical and quantum correlations during decoherence
We analyze the time dependence of entanglement and total correlations between
a system and fractions of its environment in the course of decoherence. For the
quantum Brownian motion model we show that the entanglement and total
correlations have rather different dependence on the size of the environmental
fraction. Redundancy manifests differently in both types of correlations and
can be related with induced--classicality. To study this we introduce a new
measure of redundancy and compare it with the existing one.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Decoherence induced by a dynamic spin environment (II): Disentanglement by local system-environment interactions
This article studies the decoherence induced on a system of two qubits by
local interactions with a spin chain with nontrivial internal dynamics
(governed by an XY Hamiltonian). Special attention is payed to the transition
between two limits: one in which both qubits interact with the same site of the
chain and another one where they interact with distant sites. The two cases
exhibit different behaviours in the weak and strong coupling regimes: when the
coupling is weak it is found that decoherence tends to decrease with distance,
while for strong coupling the result is the opposite. Also, in the weak
coupling case, the long distance limit is rapidly reached, while for strong
coupling there is clear evidence of an expected effect: environment-induced
interactions between the qubits of the system. A consequence of this is the
appearance of quasiperiodic events that can be interpreted as ``sudden deaths''
and ``sudden revivals'' of the entanglement between the qubits, with a time
scale related to the distance between them.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figure
Decoherence induced by a chaotic environment: A quantum walker with a complex coin
We study the differences between the process of decoherence induced by
chaotic and regular environments. For this we analyze a family of simple models
wich contain both regular and chaotic environments. In all cases the system of
interest is a "quantum walker", i.e. a quantum particle that can move on a
lattice with a finite number of sites. The walker interacts with an environment
wich has a D dimensional Hilbert space. The results we obtain suggest that
regular and chaotic environments are not distinguishable from each other in a
(short) timescale t*, wich scales with the dimensionality of the environment as
t*~log(D). Howeber, chaotic environments continue to be effective over
exponentially longer timescales while regular environments tend to reach
saturation much sooner. We present both numerical and analytical results
supporting this conclusion. The family of chaotic evolutions we consider
includes the so-called quantum multi-baker-map as a particular case.Comment: 7 pages, 8 figure
Decoherence and the Loschmidt echo
Environment--induced decoherence causes entropy increase. It can be
quantified using, e.g., the purity . When the
Hamiltonian of a quantum system is perturbed, its sensitivity to such
perturbation can be measured by the Loschmidt echo . It is given by
the average squared overlap between the perturbed and unperturbed state. We
describe the relation between the temporal behavior of and . In this way we show that the decay of the Loschmidt echo can be analyzed
using tools developed in the study of decoherence. In particular, for systems
with a classically chaotic Hamiltonian the decay of and
has a regime where it is dominated by the classical Lyapunov exponent
Measuring work and heat in ultracold quantum gases
We propose a feasible experimental scheme to direct measure heat and work in
cold atomic setups. The method is based on a recent proposal which shows that
work is a positive operator valued measure (POVM). In the present contribution,
we demonstrate that the interaction between the atoms and the light
polarisation of a probe laser allows us to implement such POVM. In this way the
work done on or extracted from the atoms after a given process is encoded in
the light quadrature that can be measured with a standard homodyne detection.
The protocol allows one to verify fluctuation theorems and study properties of
the non-unitary dynamics of a given thermodynamic process.Comment: Published version in the Focus Issue on "Quantum Thermodynamics
On coherent systems of type (n,d,n+1) on Petri curves
We study coherent systems of type on a Petri curve of genus
. We describe the geometry of the moduli space of such coherent systems
for large values of the parameter . We determine the top critical value
of and show that the corresponding ``flip'' has positive codimension.
We investigate also the non-emptiness of the moduli space for smaller values of
, proving in many cases that the condition for non-emptiness is the
same as for large . We give some detailed results for and
applications to higher rank Brill-Noether theory and the stability of kernels
of evaluation maps, thus proving Butler's conjecture in some cases in which it
was not previously known.Comment: 33 page
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