7,153 research outputs found
Semiclassical two-step model for ionization of hydrogen molecule by strong laser field
We extend the semiclassical two-step model for strong-field ionization that
describes quantum interference and accounts for the Coulomb potential beyond
the semiclassical perturbation theory to the hydrogen molecule. In the simplest
case of the molecule oriented along the polarization direction of a linearly
polarized laser field, we predict significant deviations of the two-dimensional
photoelectron momentum distributions and the energy spectra from the case of
atomic hydrogen. Specifically, for the hydrogen molecule the electron energy
spectrum falls off slower with increasing energy, and the holographic
interference fringes are more pronounced than for the hydrogen atom at the same
parameters of the laser pulse.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figure
Quantum metamaterial without local control
A quantum metamaterial can be implemented as a quantum coherent 1D array of
qubits placed in a transmission line. The properties of quantum metamaterials
are determined by the local quantum state of the system. Here we show that a
spatially-periodic quantum state of such a system can be realized without
direct control of the constituent qubits, by their interaction with the
initializing ("priming") pulses sent through the system in opposite directions.
The properties of the resulting quantum photonic crystal are determined by the
choice of the priming pulses. This proposal can be readily generalized to other
implementations of quantum metamaterials.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure
Multivalued current-phase relationship in a.c. Josephson effect for a three-dimensional Weyl semimetal WTe
We experimentally study electron transport between two superconducting indium
leads, coupled to a single WTe crystal, which is a three-dimensional Weyl
semimetal. We demonstrate Josephson current in long 5~m In-WTe-In
junctions, as confirmed by the observation of integer (1,2,3) and fractional
(1/3, 1/2, 2/3) Shapiro steps under microwave irradiation. Demonstration of
fractional a.c. Josephson effect indicates multivalued character of the
current-phase relationship, which we connect with Weyl topological surface
states contribution to Josephson current. In contrast to topological insulators
and Dirac semimetals, we do not observe periodicity in a.c. Josephson
effect for WTe at different frequencies and power, which might reflect
chiral character of the Fermi arc surface states in Weyl semimetal.Comment: the text is seriously corrected. arXiv admin note: text overlap with
arXiv:1801.0955
Signature of Fermi arc surface states in Andreev reflection at the WTe Weyl semimetal surface
We experimentally investigate charge transport through the interface between
a niobium superconductor and a three-dimensional WTe Weyl semimetal. In
addition to classical Andreev reflection, we observe sharp non-periodic subgap
resistance resonances. From an analysis of their positions, magnetic field and
temperature dependencies, we can interpret them as an analog of Tomasch
oscillations for transport along the topological surface state across the
region of proximity-induced superconductivity at the Nb-WTe interface.
Observation of distinct geometrical resonances implies a specific transmission
direction for carriers, which is a hallmark of the Fermi arc surface states.Comment: 5 pages, some misprints has been correcte
Semiclassical two-step model for strong-field ionization
We present a semiclassical two-step model for strong-field ionization that
accounts for path interferences of tunnel-ionized electrons in the ionic
potential beyond perturbation theory. Within the framework of a classical
trajectory Monte-Carlo representation of the phase-space dynamics, the model
employs the semiclassical approximation to the phase of the full quantum
propagator in the exit channel. By comparison with the exact numerical solution
of the time-dependent Schr\"odinger equation for strong-field ionization of
hydrogen, we show that for suitable choices of the momentum distribution after
the first tunneling step, the model yields good quantitative agreement with the
full quantum simulation. The two-dimensional photoelectron momentum
distributions, the energy spectra, and the angular distributions are found to
be in good agreement with the corresponding quantum results. Specifically, the
model quantitatively reproduces the fan-like interference patterns in the
low-energy part of the two-dimensional momentum distributions as well as the
modulations in the photoelectron angular distributions.Comment: 31 pages, 7 figure
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