4,340 research outputs found
Dependence of the BEC transition temperature on interaction strength: a perturbative analysis
We compute the critical temperature T_c of a weakly interacting uniform Bose
gas in the canonical ensemble, extending the criterion of condensation provided
by the counting statistics for the uniform ideal gas. Using ordinary
perturbation theory, we find in first order , where T_c^0 is the transition temperature of the corresponding
ideal Bose gas, a is the scattering length, and is the particle number
density.Comment: 14 pages (RevTeX
Transition temperature of a dilute homogeneous imperfect Bose gas
The leading-order effect of interactions on a homogeneous Bose gas is
theoretically predicted to shift the critical temperature by an amount
\Delta\Tc = # a_{scatt} n^{1/3} T_0 from the ideal gas result T_0, where
a_{scatt} is the scattering length and n is the density. There have been
several different theoretical estimates for the numerical coefficient #. We
claim to settle the issue by measuring the numerical coefficient in a lattice
simulation of O(2) phi^4 field theory in three dimensions---an effective theory
which, as observed previously in the literature, can be systematically matched
to the dilute Bose gas problem to reproduce non-universal quantities such as
the critical temperature. We find # = 1.32 +- 0.02.Comment: 4 pages, submitted to Phys. Rev. Lett; minor changes due to
improvement of analysis in the longer companion pape
Quantum Games and Quantum Strategies
We investigate the quantization of non-zero sum games. For the particular
case of the Prisoners' Dilemma we show that this game ceases to pose a dilemma
if quantum strategies are allowed for. We also construct a particular quantum
strategy which always gives reward if played against any classical strategy.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, typographic sign error in the definition of the
operator J correcte
Bose-Einstein Condensation Temperature of Homogenous Weakly Interacting Bose Gas in Variational Perturbation Theory Through Six Loops
We compute the shift of the transition temperature for a homogenous weakly
interacting Bose gas in leading order in the scattering length a for given
particle density n. Using variational perturbation theory through six loops in
a classical three-dimensional scalar field theory, we obtain Delta T_c/T_c =
1.25+/-0.13 a n^(1/3), in agreement with recent Monte-Carlo results.Comment: 4 pages; omega' corrected: final result changes slightly to
1.25+/-0.13; references added; several minor change
Mimicking a Squeezed Bath Interaction: Quantum Reservoir Engineering with Atoms
The interaction of an atomic two-level system and a squeezed vacuum leads to
interesting novel effects in atomic dynamics, including line narrowing in
resonance fluorescence and absorption spectra, and a suppressed (enhanced)
decay of the in-phase and out-of phase component of the atomic polarization. On
the experimental side these predictions have so far eluded observation,
essentially due to the difficulty of embedding atoms in a 4 pi squeezed vacuum.
In this paper we show how to ``engineer'' a squeezed-bath-type interaction for
an effective two-level system. In the simplest example, our two-level atom is
represented by the two ground levels of an atom with angular momentum J=1/2 ->
J=1/2 transition (a four level system) which is driven by (weak) laser fields
and coupled to the vacuum reservoir of radiation modes. Interference between
the spontaneous emission channels in optical pumping leads to a squeezed bath
type coupling, and thus to symmetry breaking of decay on the Bloch sphere. With
this system it should be possible to observe the effects predicted in the
context of squeezed bath - atom interactions. The laser parameters allow one to
choose properties of the squeezed bath interaction, such as the (effective)
photon number expectation number N and the squeezing phase phi. We present
results of a detailed analytical and numerical study.Comment: 24 pages, 8 figure
Maxwell Duality, Lorentz Invariance, and Topological Phase
We discuss the Maxwell electromagnetic duality relations between the
Aharonov-Bohm, Aharonov-Casher, and He-McKellar-Wilkens topological phases,
which allows a unified description of all three phenomena. We also elucidate
Lorentz transformations that allow these effects to be understood in an
intuitive fashion in the rest frame of the moving quantum particle. Finally, we
propose two experimental schemes for measuring the He-McKellar-Wilkens phase.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figure
A semi-classical field method for the equilibrium Bose gas and application to thermal vortices in two dimensions
We develop a semi-classical field method for the study of the weakly
interacting Bose gas at finite temperature, which, contrarily to the usual
classical field model, does not suffer from an ultraviolet cut-off dependence.
We apply the method to the study of thermal vortices in spatially homogeneous,
two-dimensional systems. We present numerical results for the vortex density
and the vortex pair distribution function. Insight in the physics of the system
is obtained by comparing the numerical results with the predictions of simple
analytical models. In particular, we calculate the activation energy required
to form a vortex pair at low temperature.Comment: 19 page
Charge dynamics in the Mott insulating phase of the ionic Hubbard model
We extend to charge and bond operators the transformation that maps the ionic
Hubbard model at half filling onto an effective spin Hamiltonian. Using these
operators we calculate the amplitude of the charge density wave in different
dimensions. In one dimension, the charge-charge correlations at large distance
d decay as 1/(d^3 ln^{3/2}d), in spite of the presence of a charge gap, as a
consequence of remaining charge-spin coupling. Bond-bond correlations decay as
(-1)^d 1/(d ln^{3/2}d) as in the usual Hubbard model.Comment: 4 pages, no figures, submitted to Phys. Rev. B printing errors
corrected and some clarifications adde
States insensitive to the Unruh effect in multi-level detectors
We give a general treatment of the spontaneous excitation rates and the
non-relativistic Lamb shift of constantly accelerated multi-level atoms as a
model for multi-level detectors. Using a covariant formulation of the dipole
coupling between the atom and the electromagnetic field we show that new
Raman-like transitions can be induced by the acceleration. Under certain
conditions these transitions can lead to stable ground and excited states which
are not affected by the non inertial motion. The magnitude of the Unruh effect
is not altered by multi-level effects. Both the spontaneous excitation rates
and the Lamb shift are not within the range of measurability.Comment: 9 Pages, late
Theory of dressed states in quantum optics
The dual Dyson series [M.Frasca, Phys. Rev. A {\bf 58}, 3439 (1998)], is used
to develop a general perturbative method for the study of atom-field
interaction in quantum optics. In fact, both Dyson series and its dual, through
renormalization group methods to remove secular terms from the perturbation
series, give the opportunity of a full study of the solution of the
Schr\"{o}dinger equation in different ranges of the parameters of the given
hamiltonian. In view of recent experiments with strong laser fields, this
approach seems well-suited to give a clarification and an improvement of the
applications of the dressed states as currently done through the eigenstates of
the atom-field interaction, showing that these are just the leading order of
the dual Dyson series when the Hamiltonian is expressed in the interaction
picture. In order to exploit the method at the best, a study is accomplished of
the well-known Jaynes-Cummings model in the rotating wave approximation, whose
exact solution is known, comparing the perturbative solutions obtained by the
Dyson series and its dual with the same approximations obtained by Taylor
expanding the exact solution. Finally, a full perturbative study of high-order
harmonic generation is given obtaining, through analytical expressions, a clear
account of the power spectrum using a two-level model, even if the method can
be successfully applied to a more general model that can account for ionization
too. The analysis shows that to account for the power spectrum it is needed to
go to first order in the perturbative analysis. The spectrum obtained gives a
way to measure experimentally the shift of the energy levels of the atom
interacting with the laser field by looking at the shifting of hyper-Raman
lines.Comment: Revtex, 17 page
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