10 research outputs found
The Entanglement Entropy between Short Range Correlations and the Fermi Sea in Nuclear Structure
We calculate the nuclear structure orbital entanglement entropy of short
range correlations (SRC) based on the nuclear scale separation. Specifically,
the entanglement between the SRC orbitals and the rest of the system. It should
be stressed that this is a single nucleon not a pair entanglement entropy
between the proton and neutron. The entanglement arises from the probability
for a nucleon to occupy a momentum state above the Fermi momentum. We separate
the momentum space of the nucleus into two parts such that nucleons can occupy
the meanfield part of the wave function, i.e. Fermi sea (FS) and separately the
high-momentum SRC part. The orbital entropy we obtain is between these two
parts where we essentially define two momentum subspaces, one containing all
the low momentum FS states and the other the high-momentum part as a SRC
"orbital" state. For the calculation we employ the decoupling of low and
high-momenta which was established by the similarity normalization group the
SRC is viewed as a further "orbital" which can be multiply occupied. Since the
probability of the occupation of a single SRC is given by the nuclear contact
we are able to obtain a simple general expression of the orbital entanglement
entropy for SRC by employing the generalized contact formalism. This general
formula for the SRC orbital entanglement entropy of a nuclear structure in
terms of the nuclear contact, allows us to obtain the scaling of the entropy in
terms the mass number, . We find that, unlike the entanglement entropy of
many quantum systems which scales with the surface area, the orbital
entanglement entropy associated with the SRC in large nuclei is linearly
dependent on , i.e., it is shown to be extensive
Calculation of pure dephasing for excitons in quantum dots
Pure dephasing of an exciton in a small quantum dot by optical and acoustic
phonons is calculated using the ``independent boson model''. Considering the
case of zero temperature the dephasing is shown to be only partial which
manifests itself in the polarization decaying to a finite value. Typical
dephasing times can be assigned even though the spectra exhibits strongly
non-Lorentzian line shapes. We show that the dephasing from LO phonon
scattering, occurs on a much larger time scale than that of dephasing due to
acoustic phonons which for low temperatures are also a more efficient dephasing
mechanism. The typical dephasing time is shown to strongly depend on the
quantum dot size whereas the electron phonon ``coupling strength'' and external
electric fields tend mostly to effect the residual coherence. The relevance of
the dephasing times for current quantum information processing implementation
schemes in quantum dots is discussed
Boson-like quantum dynamics of association in ultracold Fermi gases
We study the collective association dynamics of a cold Fermi gas of
atoms in atomic modes into a single molecular bosonic mode. The many-body
fermionic problem for amplitudes is effectively reduced to a dynamical
system of amplitudes, making the solution no more complex than
the solution of a two-mode Bose-Einstein condensate and allowing realistic
calculations with up to particles. The many-body dynamics is shown to be
formally similar to the dynamics of the bosonic system under the mapping of
boson particles to fermion holes, producing collective enhancement effects due
to many-particle constructive interference. Dissociation rates are shown to
enhance as the number of particles whereas association rates are enhanced as
the number of holes, leading to boson-like collective behavior.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, critical typo in Eq. (13) correcte
Storage Qubits and Their Potential Implementation Through a Semiconductor Double Quantum Dot
In the context of a semiconductor based implementation of a quantum computer
the idea of a quantum storage bit is presented and a possible implementation
using a double quantum dot structure is considered. A measurement scheme using
a stimulated Raman adiabatic passage is discussed.Comment: Revised version accepted for publication in Phys.Rev. B. 19 pages, 4
eps figure