871 research outputs found
Equivalence of Kinetic Theories of Bose-Einstein Condensation
We discuss the equivalence of two non-equilibrium kinetic theories that
describe the evolution of a dilute, Bose-Einstein condensed atomic gas in a
harmonic trap. The second-order kinetic equations of Walser et al. [PRA 63,
013607 (2001)] reduce to the Gross-Pitaevskii equation and the quantum
Boltzmann equation in the low and high temperature limits, respectively. These
kinetic equations can thus describe the system in equilibrium (finite
temperature) as well as in non-equilibrium (real time). We have found this
theory to be equivalent to the non-equilibrium Green's function approach
originally proposed by Kadanoff and Baym and more recently applied to
inhomogeneous trapped systems by M. Imamovi\'c-Tomasovi\'c and A. Griffin
[arXiv:cond-mat/9911402].Comment: REVTeX3, 6 pages, 2 eps figures, published version, minor change
Submillimeter wavelength survey of the galactic plane from l = -5 deg to l = +62 deg: Structure and energetics of the inner disk
Results from a large scale survey of the first quadrant of the Milky Way galactic plane at wavelengths of 150, 250, and 300 microns with a 10x10 arcmin beam are presented. The emission detected in the survey arises from compact sources, most of which are identified with known peaks of 5 GHz and/or CO emission, and from an underlying diffuse background with a typical angular width of approximately 0.9 deg (FWHM) which accounts for most of the emission. A total of 80 prominent discrete sources were identified and characterized, of which about half were not previously reported at far infrared wavelengths. The total infrared luminosity within the solar circle is approximately 1 to 2x10 to the 10th power L sub 0, and is probably emitted by dust that resides in molecular clouds
Noise spectroscopy of optical microcavity
The intensity noise spectrum of the light passed through an optical
microcavity is calculated with allowance for thermal fluctuations of its
thickness. The spectrum thus obtained reveals a peak at the frequency of
acoustic mode localized inside the microcavity and depends on the size of the
illuminated area. The estimates of the noise magnitude show that it can be
detected using the up-to-date noise spectroscopy technique.Comment: 10 pages, 1 figur
Comment on "Loss-error compensation in quantum-state measurements"
In the two papers [T. Kiss, U. Herzog, and U. Leonhardt, Phys. Rev. A 52,
2433 (1995); U. Herzog, Phys. Rev. A 53, 1245 (1996)] with titles similar to
the one given above, the authors assert that in some cases it is possible to
compensate a quantum efficiency in quantum-state measurements,
violating the lower bound 1/2 proved in a preceding paper [G. M. D'Ariano, U.
Leonhardt and H. Paul, Phys. Rev. A 52, R1801 (1995)]. Here we re-establish the
bound as unsurpassable for homodyning any quantum state, and show how the
proposed loss-compensation method would always fail in a real measurement
outside the allowed region.Comment: 3 pages, RevTeX, 2 figures included, to appear on Phys. Rev. A (April
1998
Wave Energy Amplification in a Metamaterial based Traveling Wave Structure
We consider the interaction between a particle beam and a propagating
electromagnetic wave in the presence of a metamaterial. We show that the
introduction of a metamaterial gives rise to a novel dispersion curve which
determines a unique wave particle relationship, via the frequency dependence of
the metamaterial and the novel ability of metamaterials to exhibit simultaneous
negative permittivity and permeability. Using a modified form of Madey's
theorem we find that the novel dispersion of the metamaterial leads to a
amplification of the EM wave power
Relativistic treatment of harmonics from impurity systems in quantum wires
Within a one particle approximation of the Dirac equation we investigate a
defect system in a quantum wire. We demonstrate that by minimally coupling a
laser field of frequency omega to such an impurity system, one may generate
harmonics of multiples of the driving frequency. In a multiple defect system
one may employ the distance between the defects in order to tune the cut-off
frequency.Comment: 9 pages Latex, 8 eps figures, section added, numerics improve
Damped Bogoliubov excitations of a condensate interacting with a static thermal cloud
We calculate the damping of condensate collective excitations at finite
temperatures arising from the lack of equilibrium between the condensate and
thermal atoms. We neglect the non-condensate dynamics by fixing the thermal
cloud in static equilibrium. We derive a set of generalized Bogoliubov
equations for finite temperatures that contain an explicit damping term due to
collisional exchange of atoms between the two components. We have numerically
solved these Bogoliubov equations to obtain the temperature dependence of the
damping of the condensate modes in a harmonic trap. We compare these results
with our recent work based on the Thomas-Fermi approximation.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures included. Submitted to PR
Measuring the Quantum State of a Large Angular Momentum
We demonstrate a general method to measure the quantum state of an angular
momentum of arbitrary magnitude. The (2F+1) x (2F+1) density matrix is
completely determined from a set of Stern-Gerlach measurements with (4F+1)
different orientations of the quantization axis. We implement the protocol for
laser cooled Cesium atoms in the 6S_{1/2}(F=4) hyperfine ground state and apply
it to a variety of test states prepared by optical pumping and Larmor
precession. A comparison of input and measured states shows typical
reconstruction fidelities of about 0.95.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figures, submitted to PR
Interferometry with Bose-Einstein Condensates in Microgravity
Atom interferometers covering macroscopic domains of space-time are a
spectacular manifestation of the wave nature of matter. Due to their unique
coherence properties, Bose-Einstein condensates are ideal sources for an atom
interferometer in extended free fall. In this paper we report on the
realization of an asymmetric Mach-Zehnder interferometer operated with a
Bose-Einstein condensate in microgravity. The resulting interference pattern is
similar to the one in the far-field of a double-slit and shows a linear scaling
with the time the wave packets expand. We employ delta-kick cooling in order to
enhance the signal and extend our atom interferometer. Our experiments
demonstrate the high potential of interferometers operated with quantum gases
for probing the fundamental concepts of quantum mechanics and general
relativity.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures; 8 pages of supporting materia
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