51 research outputs found
Spectral Analysis of a Model for Quantum Friction
An otherwise free classical particle moving through an extended spatially
homogeneous medium with which it may exchange energy and momentum will undergo
a frictional drag force in the direction opposite to its velocity with a
magnitude which is typically proportional to a power of its speed. We study
here the quantum equivalent of a classical Hamiltonian model for this friction
phenomenon that was proposed in [11]. More precisely, we study the spectral
properties of the quantum Hamiltonian and compare the quantum and classical
situations. Under suitable conditions on the infrared behaviour of the model,
we prove that the Hamiltonian at fixed total momentum has no ground state
except when the total momentum vanishes, and that its spectrum is otherwise
absolutely continuous.Comment: 40 page
Dynamical mechanisms leading to equilibration in two-component gases
Demonstrating how microscopic dynamics cause large systems to approach
thermal equilibrium remains an elusive, longstanding, and actively-pursued goal
of statistical mechanics. We identify here a dynamical mechanism for
thermalization in a general class of two-component dynamical Lorentz gases, and
prove that each component, even when maintained in a non-equilibrium state
itself, can drive the other to a thermal state with a well-defined effective
temperature.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Dynamics of the mean-field interacting quantum kicked rotor
We study the dynamics of the many-body atomic kicked rotor with interactions
at the mean-field level, governed by the Gross-Pitaevskii equation. We show
that dynamical localization is destroyed by the interaction, and replaced by a
subdiffusive behavior. In contrast to results previously obtained from a
simplified version of the Gross-Pitaevskii equation, the subdiffusive exponent
does not appear to be universal. By studying the phase of the mean-field wave
function, we propose a new approximation that describes correctly the dynamics
at experimentally relevant times close to the start of subdiffusion, while
preserving the reduced computational cost of the former approximation.Comment: v1) 5 pages, 4 figures; v2) 7 pages, 4 figure
Relating the Entanglement and Optical Nonclassicality of Multimode States of a Bosonic Quantum Field
The quantum nature of the state of a bosonic quantum field manifests itself
in its entanglement, coherence, or optical nonclassicality which are each known
to be resources for quantum computing or metrology. We provide quantitative and
computable bounds relating entanglement measures with optical nonclassicality
measures. These bounds imply that strongly entangled states must necessarily be
strongly optically nonclassical. As an application, we infer strong bounds on
the entanglement that can be produced with an optically nonclassical state
impinging on a beam splitter. For Gaussian states, we analyze the link between
the logarithmic negativity and a specific nonclassicality witness called
"quadrature coherence scale".Comment: 13 pages, 2 figures, change of notation in v
Quadrature coherence scale driven fast decoherence of bosonic quantum field states
International audienceWe introduce, for each state of a bosonic quantum field, its quadrature coherence scale (QCS), a measure of the range of its quadrature coherences. Under coupling to a thermal bath, the purity and QCS are shown to decrease on a time scale inversely proportional to the QCS squared. The states most fragile to decoherence are therefore those with quadrature coherences far from the diagonal. We further show a large QCS is difficult to measure since it induces small scale variations in the state's Wigner function. These two observations imply a large QCS constitutes a mark of "macroscopic coherence". Finally, we link the QCS to optical classicality: optical classical states have a small QCS and a large QCS implies strong optical nonclassicality
Characterizing the geometry of the Kirkwood-Dirac positive states
The Kirkwood-Dirac (KD) quasiprobability distribution can describe any
quantum state with respect to the eigenbases of two observables and . KD
distributions behave similarly to classical joint probability distributions but
can assume negative and nonreal values. In recent years, KD distributions have
proven instrumental in mapping out nonclassical phenomena and quantum
advantages. These quantum features have been connected to nonpositive entries
of KD distributions. Consequently, it is important to understand the geometry
of the KD-positive and -nonpositive states. Until now, there has been no
thorough analysis of the KD positivity of mixed states. Here, we characterize
how the full convex set of states with positive KD distributions depends on the
eigenbases of and . In particular, we identify three regimes where
convex combinations of the eigenprojectors of and constitute the only
KD-positive states: any system in dimension ; an open and dense
set of bases in dimension ; and the discrete-Fourier-transform bases
in prime dimension. Finally, we investigate if there can exist mixed
KD-positive states that cannot be written as convex combinations of pure
KD-positive states. We show that for some choices of observables and
this phenomenon does indeed occur. We explicitly construct such states for a
spin- system.Comment: 35 pages, 2 figure
Stability analysis of a Vlasov-Wave system describing particles interacting with their environment
International audienceWe study a kinetic equation of the Vlasov-Wave type, which arises in the description of the behaviour of a large number of particles interacting weakly with an environment, composed of an infinite collection of local vibrational degrees of freedom, modeled by wave equations. We use variational techniques to establish the existence of large families of stationary states for this system, and analyze their stability
Chaotic Dynamics of a Free Particle Interacting Linearly with a Harmonic Oscillator
We study the closed Hamiltonian dynamics of a free particle moving on a ring,
over one section of which it interacts linearly with a single harmonic
oscillator. On the basis of numerical and analytical evidence, we conjecture
that at small positive energies the phase space of our model is completely
chaotic except for a single region of complete integrability with a smooth
sharp boundary showing no KAM-type structures of any kind. This results in the
cleanest mixed phase space structure possible, in which motions in the
integrable region and in the chaotic region are clearly separated and
independent of one another. For certain system parameters, this mixed phase
space structure can be tuned to make either of the two components disappear,
leaving a completely integrable or completely chaotic phase space. For other
values of the system parameters, additional structures appear, such as KAM-like
elliptic islands, and one parameter families of parabolic periodic orbits
embedded in the chaotic sea. The latter are analogous to bouncing ball orbits
seen in the stadium billiard. The analytical part of our study proceeds from a
geometric description of the dynamics, and shows it to be equivalent to a
linked twist map on the union of two intersecting disks.Comment: 17 pages, 11 figures Typos corrected to display section label
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