1,403 research outputs found
Photon tunneling through absorbing dielectric barriers
Using a recently developed formalism of quantization of radiation in the
presence of absorbing dielectric bodies, the problem of photon tunneling
through absorbing barriers is studied. The multilayer barriers are described in
terms of multistep complex permittivities in the frequency domain which satisfy
the Kramers--Kronig relations. From the resulting input--output relations it is
shown that losses in the layers may considerably change the photon tunneling
times observed in two-photon interference experiments. It is further shown that
for sufficiently large numbers of layers interference fringes are observed that
cannot be related to a single traversal time.Comment: 17 pages LaTeX, 9 figures (PS) include
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
Soliton solutions of the nonlinear Schr\"odinger equation with defect conditions
A recent development in the derivation of soliton solutions for
initial-boundary value problems through Darboux transformations, motivated to
reconsider solutions to the nonlinear Schr\"odinger (NLS) equation on two
half-lines connected via integrable defect conditions. Thereby, the Darboux
transformation to construct soliton solutions is applied, while preserving the
spectral boundary constraint with a time-dependent defect matrix. In this
particular model, -soliton solutions vanishing at infinity are constructed.
Further, it is proven that solitons are transmitted through the defect
independently of one another.Comment: 35 pages, 6 figure
Electron Spin Resonance of the Yb 4f moment in Yb(Rh1-xCox)2Si2
[published in Phys. Rev. B 85, 035119 (2012)] The evolution of spin dynamics
from the quantum critical system YbRh2Si2 to the stable trivalent Yb system
YbCo2Si2 was investigated by Electron Spin Resonance (ESR) spectroscopy. While
the Kondo temperature changes by one order of magnitude, all compositions of
the single crystalline series Yb(Rh1-xCox)2Si2 show well defined ESR spectra
with a clear Yb3+ character for temperatures below \approx 20 K. With
increasing Co-content the ESR g-factor along the c-direction strongly increases
indicating a continuous change of the ground state wave function and, thus, a
continuous change of the crystal electric field. The linewidth presents a
complex dependence on the Co-content and is discussed in terms of the Co-doping
dependence of the Kondo interaction, the magnetic anisotropy and the influence
of ferromagnetic correlations between the 4f states. The results provide
evidence that, for low Co-doping, the Kondo interaction allows narrow ESR
spectra despite the presence of a large magnetic anisotropy, whereas at high
Co-concentrations, the linewidth is controlled by ferromagnetic correlations. A
pronounced broadening due to critical correlations at low temperatures is only
observed at the highest Co-content. This might be related to the presence of
incommensurate magnetic fluctuations.Comment: 8 pages, 8 Figure
Anisotropic electron spin resonance of YbIr2Si2
A series of electron spin resonance (ESR) experiments were performed on a
single crystal of the heavy fermion metal YbIr2Si2 to map out the anisotropy of
the ESR-intensity I_ESR which is governed by the microwave field component of
the g-factor. The temperature dependencies of I_ESR(T) and g(T) were measured
for different orientations and compared within the range 2.6K \le T \le 16K.
The analysis of the intensity dependence on the crystal orientation with
respect to both the direction of the microwave field and the static magnetic
field revealed remarkable features: The intensity variation with respect to the
direction of the microwave field was found to be one order of magnitude smaller
than expected from the g-factor anisotropy. Furthermore, we observed a weak
basal plane anisotropy of the ESR parameters which we interpret to be an
intrinsic sample property.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figure
Pressure Induced Hydration Dynamics of Membranes
Pressure-jump initiated time-resolved x-ray diffraction studies of dynamics
of the hydration of the hexagonal phase in biological membranes show that (i)
the relaxation of the unit cell spacing is non-exponential in time; (ii) the
Bragg peaks shift smoothly to their final positions without significant
broadening or loss in crystalline order. This suggests that the hydration is
not diffusion limited but occurs via a rather homogeneous swelling of the whole
lattice, described by power law kinetics with an exponent .Comment: REVTEX 3, 10 pages,3 figures(available on request),#
Spin fluctuations with two-dimensional XY behavior in a frustrated S = 1/2 square-lattice ferromagnet
The spin dynamics of the layered square-lattice vanadate Pb2VO(PO4)2 is
investigated by electron spin resonance at various magnetic fields and at
temperatures above magnetic ordering. The linewidth divergence towards low
temperatures seems to agree with isotropic Heisenberg-type spin exchange
suggesting that the spin relaxation in this quasi-two dimensional compound is
governed by low-dimensional quantum fluctuations. However, a weak easy- plane
anisotropy of the g factor points to the presence of a planar XY type of
exchange. Indeed, we found that the linewidth divergence is described best by
XY-like spin fluctuations which requires a single parameter only. Therefore,
ESR-probed spin dynamics could establish Pb2VO(PO4)2 as the first frustrated
square lattice system with XY-inherent spin topological fluctuations.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
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