401 research outputs found
Fast mode of rotating atoms in one-dimensional lattice rings
We study the rotation of atoms in one-dimensional lattice rings. In
particular, the "fast mode", where the ground state atoms rotate faster than
the stirring rotating the atoms, is studied both analytically and numerically.
The conditions for the transition to the fast mode are found to be very
different from that in continuum rings. We argue that these transition
frequencies remain unchanged for bosonic condensates described in a mean field.
We show that Fermionic interaction and filling factor have a significant effect
on the transition to the fast mode, and Pauli principle may suppress it
altogether.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Diffusion induced decoherence of stored optical vortices
We study the coherence properties of optical vortices stored in atomic
ensembles. In the presence of thermal diffusion, the topological nature of
stored optical vortices is found not to guarantee slow decoherence. Instead the
stored vortex state has decoherence surprisingly larger than the stored
Gaussian mode. Generally, the less phase gradient, the more robust for stored
coherence against diffusion. Furthermore, calculation of coherence factor shows
that the center of stored vortex becomes completely incoherent once diffusion
begins and, when reading laser is applied, the optical intensity at the center
of the vortex becomes nonzero. Its implication for quantum information is
discussed. Comparison of classical diffusion and quantum diffusion is also
presented.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
Image Storage in Hot Vapors
We theoretically investigate image propagation and storage in hot atomic
vapor. A system is adopted for imaging and an atomic vapor cell is placed
over the transform plane. The Fraunhofer diffraction pattern of an object in
the object plane can thus be transformed into atomic Raman coherence according
to the idea of ``light storage''. We investigate how the stored diffraction
pattern evolves under diffusion. Our result indicates, under appropriate
conditions, that an image can be reconstructed with high fidelity. The main
reason for this procedure to work is the fact that diffusion of opposite-phase
components of the diffraction pattern interfere destructively.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figure
Rydberg atom mediated polar molecule interactions: a tool for molecular-state conditional quantum gates and individual addressability
We study the possibility to use interaction between a polar molecule in the
ground electronic and vibrational state and a Rydberg atom to construct
two-qubit gates between molecular qubits and to coherently control molecular
states. A polar molecule within the electron orbit in a Rydberg atom can either
shift the Rydberg state, or form Rydberg molecule. Both the atomic shift and
the Rydberg molecule states depend on the initial internal state of the polar
molecule, resulting in molecular state dependent van der Waals or dipole-dipole
interaction between Rydberg atoms. Rydberg atoms mediated interaction between
polar molecules can be enhanced up to times. We describe how the
coupling between a polar molecule and a Rydberg atom can be applied to coherent
control of molecular states, specifically, to individual addressing of
molecules in an optical lattice and non-destructive readout of molecular
qubits
Single photon nonlinearities using arrays of cold polar molecules
We model single photon nonlinearities resulting from the dipole-dipole
interactions of cold polar molecules. We propose utilizing ``dark state
polaritons'' to effectively couple photon and molecular states; through this
framework, coherent control of the nonlinearity can be expressed and
potentially used in an optical quantum computation architecture. Due to the
dipole-dipole interaction the photons pick up a measurable nonlinear phase even
in the single photon regime. A manifold of protected symmetric eigenstates is
used as basis. Depending on the implementation, major sources of decoherence
result from non-symmetric interactions and phonon dispersion. We discuss the
strength of the nonlinearity per photon and the feasibility of this system.Comment: 8 pages, 9 figures Accepted for publication in Physical Review
Cluster state generation using van der Waals and dipole-dipole interactions in optical lattices
We present a scalable method for generation of a cluster state for
measurement-based quantum computing using van der Waals or dipole-dipole
interactions between neutral atoms or polar molecules in an optical lattice.
Nearest neighbor entanglement is accomplished by performing a phase gate using
interaction of atoms in Rydberg states or molecules in large dipole moment
states. All nearest neighbors are sequentially entangled in a finite number of
operations, independent of the number of qubits, producing a 1D cluster state.
A universal 2D cluster state can be generated in several ms in a
two-dimensional optical lattice by producing a series of 1D cluster states in
one lattice direction, followed by application of the entangling operations in
another lattice direction. We discuss the viability of the scheme with Rb
Rydberg atoms.Comment: Revised and expanded versio
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