2,170 research outputs found
Theory of cavity-assisted microwave cooling of polar molecules
We analyze cavity-assisted cooling schemes for polar molecules in the
microwave domain, where molecules are excited on a rotational transition and
energy is dissipated via strong interactions with a lossy stripline cavity, as
recently proposed by A. Andre et al., Nature Physics 2, 636 (2006). We identify
the dominant cooling and heating mechanisms in this setup and study cooling
rates and final temperatures in various parameter regimes. In particular we
analyze the effects of a finite environment temperature on the cooling
efficiency, and find minimal temperature and optimized cooling rate in the
strong drive regime. Further we discuss the trade-off between efficiency of
cavity cooling and robustness with respect to ubiquitous imperfections in a
realistic experimental setup, such as anharmonicity of the trapping potential
Absorption in Ultra-Peripheral Nucleus-Atom Collisions in Crystal
The Glauber theory description of particle- and nucleus-crystal Coulomb
interactions at high-energy is developed. The allowance for the lattice thermal
vibrations is shown to produce strong absorption effect which is of prime
importance for quantitative understanding of the coherent Coulomb excitation of
ultra-relativistic particles and nuclei passing through the crystal.Comment: 8 pages, LaTe
Controlled collisions of a single atom and ion guided by movable trapping potentials
We consider a system composed of a trapped atom and a trapped ion. The ion
charge induces in the atom an electric dipole moment, which attracts it with an
r^{-4} dependence at large distances. In the regime considered here, the
characteristic range of the atom-ion interaction is comparable or larger than
the characteristic size of the trapping potential, which excludes the
application of the contact pseudopotential. The short-range part of the
interaction is described in the framework of quantum-defect theory, by
introducing some short-range parameters, which can be related to the s-wave
scattering length. When the separation between traps is changed we observe
trap-induced shape resonances between molecular bound states and vibrational
states of the external trapping potential. Our analysis is extended to
quasi-one-dimensional geometries, when the scattering exhibit
confinement-induced resonances, similar to the ones studied before for
short-range interactions. For quasi-one-dimensional systems we investigate the
effects of coupling between the center of mass and relative motion, which
occurs for different trapping frequencies of atom and ion traps. Finally, we
show how the two types of resonances can be employed for quantum state control
and spectroscopy of atom-ion molecules.Comment: 17 pages, 16 figure
Opto-mechanical transducers for long-distance quantum communication
We describe a new scheme to interconvert stationary and photonic qubits which
is based on indirect qubit-light interactions mediated by a mechanical
resonator. This approach does not rely on the specific optical response of the
qubit and thereby enables optical quantum interfaces for a wide range of solid
state spin and charge based systems. We discuss the implementation of quantum
state transfer protocols between distant nodes of a large scale network and
evaluate the effect of the main noise sources on the resulting state transfer
fidelities. For the specific examples of electronic spin qubits and
superconducting charge qubits we show that high fidelity quantum communication
protocols can be implemented under realistic experimental conditions.Comment: Version as accepted by PR
Probing topology by "heating": Quantized circular dichroism in ultracold atoms
We reveal an intriguing manifestation of topology, which appears in the
depletion rate of topological states of matter in response to an external
drive. This phenomenon is presented by analyzing the response of a generic 2D
Chern insulator subjected to a circular time-periodic perturbation: due to the
system's chiral nature, the depletion rate is shown to depend on the
orientation of the circular shake. Most importantly, taking the difference
between the rates obtained from two opposite orientations of the drive, and
integrating over a proper drive-frequency range, provides a direct measure of
the topological Chern number of the populated band (): this "differential
integrated rate" is directly related to the strength of the driving field
through the quantized coefficient . Contrary to the
integer quantum Hall effect, this quantized response is found to be non-linear
with respect to the strength of the driving field and it explicitly involves
inter-band transitions. We investigate the possibility of probing this
phenomenon in ultracold gases and highlight the crucial role played by edge
states in this effect. We extend our results to 3D lattices, establishing a
link between depletion rates and the non-linear photogalvanic effect predicted
for Weyl semimetals. The quantized circular dichroism revealed in this work
designates depletion-rate measurements as a universal probe for topological
order in quantum matter.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures (including Sup. Mat.). Revised version, accepted
for publicatio
Creation of a molecular condensate by dynamically melting a Mott-insulator
We propose creation of a molecular Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC) by loading
an atomic BEC into an optical lattice and driving it into a Mott insulator (MI)
with exactly two atoms per site. Molecules in a MI state are then created under
well defined conditions by photoassociation with essentially unit efficiency.
Finally, the MI is melted and a superfluid state of the molecules is created.
We study the dynamics of this process and photoassociation of tightly trapped
atoms.Comment: minor revisions, 5 pages, 3 figures, REVTEX4, accepted by PRL for
publicatio
Fault-Tolerant Dissipative Preparation of Atomic Quantum Registers with Fermions
We propose a fault tolerant loading scheme to produce an array of fermions in
an optical lattice of the high fidelity required for applications in quantum
information processing and the modelling of strongly correlated systems. A cold
reservoir of Fermions plays a dual role as a source of atoms to be loaded into
the lattice via a Raman process and as a heat bath for sympathetic cooling of
lattice atoms. Atoms are initially transferred into an excited motional state
in each lattice site, and then decay to the motional ground state, creating
particle-hole pairs in the reservoir. Atoms transferred into the ground
motional level are no longer coupled back to the reservoir, and doubly occupied
sites in the motional ground state are prevented by Pauli blocking. This scheme
has strong conceptual connections with optical pumping, and can be extended to
load high-fidelity patterns of atoms.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures, RevTex
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