3,674 research outputs found
Modified and controllable dispersion interaction in a 1D waveguide geometry
Dispersion interactions such as the van der Waals interaction between atoms
or molecules derive from quantum fluctuations of the electromagnetic field and
can be understood as the exchange of virtual photons between the interacting
partners. Any modification of the environment in which those photons propagate
will thus invariably lead to an alteration of the van der Waals interaction.
Here we show how the two-body dispersion interaction inside a cylindrical
waveguide can be made to decay asymptotically exponentially, and how this
effect sensitively depends on the material properties and the length scales of
the problem, eventually leading to the possibility of controllable
interactions. Further, we discuss the possibility to detect the retarded van
der Waals interaction by resonant enhancement of the interaction between
Rydberg atoms in the light of long-range potentials due to guided modes.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figure
Entanglement degradation of a two-mode squeezed vacuum in absorbing and amplifying optical fibers
Applying the recently developed formalism of quantum-state transformation at
absorbing dielectric four-port devices [L.~Kn\"oll, S.~Scheel, E.~Schmidt,
D.-G.~Welsch, and A.V.~Chizhov, Phys. Rev. A {\bf 59}, 4716 (1999)], we
calculate the quantum state of the outgoing modes of a two-mode squeezed vacuum
transmitted through optical fibers of given extinction coefficients. Using the
Peres--Horodecki separability criterion for continuous variable systems
[R.~Simon, Phys. Rev. Lett. {\bf 84}, 2726 (2000)], we compute the maximal
length of transmission of a two-mode squeezed vacuum through an absorbing
system for which the transmitted state is still inseparable. Further, we
calculate the maximal gain for which inseparability can be observed in an
amplifying setup. Finally, we estimate an upper bound of the entanglement
preserved after transmission through an absorbing system. The results show that
the characteristic length of entanglement degradation drastically decreases
with increasing strength of squeezing.Comment: Paper presented at the International Conference on Quantum Optics and
VIII Seminar on Quantum Optics, Raubichi, Belarus, May 28-31, 2000, 11 pages,
LaTeX2e, 4 eps figure
Traveling waves in rotating Rayleigh-Bénard convection: Analysis of modes and mean flow
Numerical simulations of the Boussinesq equations with rotation for realistic no-slip boundary conditions and a finite annular domain are presented. These simulations reproduce traveling waves observed experimentally. Traveling waves are studied near threshhold by using the complex Ginzburg-Landau equation (CGLE): a mode analysis enables the CGLE coefficients to be determined. The CGLE coefficients are compared with previous experimental and theoretical results. Mean flows are also computed and found to be more significant as the Prandtl number decreases (from sigma=6.4 to sigma=1). In addition, the mean flow around the outer radius of the annulus appears to be correlated with the mean flow around the inner radius
Prospects for using integrated atom-photon junctions for quantum information processing
We investigate the use of integrated, microfabricated photonic-atomic
junctions for quantum information processing applications. The coupling between
atoms and light is enhanced by using microscopic optics without the need for
cavity enhancement. Qubits that are collectively encoded in hyperfine states of
small ensembles of optically trapped atoms, coupled via the Rydberg blockade
mechanism, seem a particularly promising implementation. Fast and high-fidelity
gate operations, efficient readout, long coherence times and large numbers of
qubits are all possible.Comment: submitted to special issue "Quantum Information with Neutral
Particles" of "Quantum Information Processing
On the equivalence of the Langevin and auxiliary field quantization methods for absorbing dielectrics
Recently two methods have been developed for the quantization of the
electromagnetic field in general dispersing and absorbing linear dielectrics.
The first is based upon the introduction of a quantum Langevin current in
Maxwell's equations [T. Gruner and D.-G. Welsch, Phys. Rev. A 53, 1818 (1996);
Ho Trung Dung, L. Kn\"{o}ll, and D.-G. Welsch, Phys. Rev. A 57, 3931 (1998); S.
Scheel, L. Kn\"{o}ll, and D.-G. Welsch, Phys. Rev. A 58, 700 (1998)], whereas
the second makes use of a set of auxiliary fields, followed by a canonical
quantization procedure [A. Tip, Phys. Rev. A 57, 4818 (1998)]. We show that
both approaches are equivalent.Comment: 7 pages, RevTeX, no figure
Black Hole Area in Brans-Dicke Theory
We have shown that the dynamics of the scalar field
in Brans-Dicke theories of gravity makes the surface area of the black hole
horizon {\it oscillatory} during its dynamical evolution. It explicitly
explains why the area theorem does not hold in Brans-Dicke theory. However, we
show that there exists a certain non-decreasing quantity defined on the event
horizon which is proportional to the black hole entropy for the case of
stationary solutions in Brans-Dicke theory. Some numerical simulations have
been demonstrated for Oppenheimer-Snyder collapse in Brans-Dicke theory.Comment: 12 pages, latex, 5 figures, epsfig.sty, some statements clarified and
two references added, to appear in Phys. Rev.
Treating instabilities in a hyperbolic formulation of Einstein's equations
We have recently constructed a numerical code that evolves a spherically
symmetric spacetime using a hyperbolic formulation of Einstein's equations. For
the case of a Schwarzschild black hole, this code works well at early times,
but quickly becomes inaccurate on a time scale of 10-100 M, where M is the mass
of the hole. We present an analytic method that facilitates the detection of
instabilities. Using this method, we identify a term in the evolution equations
that leads to a rapidly-growing mode in the solution. After eliminating this
term from the evolution equations by means of algebraic constraints, we can
achieve free evolution for times exceeding 10000M. We discuss the implications
for three-dimensional simulations.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figures. To appear in Phys. Rev.
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