228 research outputs found

    Effects of nonlinear sweep in the Landau-Zener-Stueckelberg effect

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    We study the Landau-Zener-Stueckelberg (LZS) effect for a two-level system with a time-dependent nonlinear bias field (the sweep function) W(t). Our main concern is to investigate the influence of the nonlinearity of W(t) on the probability P to remain in the initial state. The dimensionless quantity epsilon = pi Delta ^2/(2 hbar v) depends on the coupling Delta of both levels and on the sweep rate v. For fast sweep rates, i.e., epsilon << l and monotonic, analytic sweep functions linearizable in the vicinity of the resonance we find the transition probability 1-P ~= epsilon (1+a), where a>0 is the correction to the LSZ result due to the nonlinearity of the sweep. Further increase of the sweep rate with nonlinearity fixed brings the system into the nonlinear-sweep regime characterized by 1-P ~= epsilon ^gamma with gamma neq 1 depending on the type of sweep function. In case of slow sweep rates, i.e., epsilon >>1 an interesting interference phenomenon occurs. For analytic W(t) the probability P=P_0 e^-eta is determined by the singularities of sqrt{Delta ^2+W^2(t)} in the upper complex plane of t. If W(t) is close to linear, there is only one singularity, that leads to the LZS result P=e^-epsilon with important corrections to the exponent due to nonlinearity. However, for, e.g., W(t) ~ t^3 there is a pair of singularities in the upper complex plane. Interference of their contributions leads to oscillations of the prefactor P_0 that depends on the sweep rate through epsilon and turns to zero at some epsilon. Measurements of the oscillation period and of the exponential factor would allow to determine Delta, independently.Comment: 11 PR pages, 12 figures. To be published in PR

    Comparison of recoil effects in graphite as observed by photoemission, electron scattering, and neutron scattering

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    Recoil effects have been observed for neutron and electron scatterings, and in photoemission. In all cases highly oriented pyrolytic graphite was used as a testing material and dependencies of recoil effects on the crystal orientation were found but these results have, so far, not been compared. We show that the same theory can describe the results of all three experiments in a quantitative way

    Dynamics of an electron in finite and infinite one dimensional systems in presence of electric field

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    We study,numerically, the dynamical behavior of an electron in a two site nonlinear system driven by dc and ac electric field separately. We also study, numerically, the effect of electric field on single static impurity and antidimeric dynamical impurity in an infinite 1D chain to find the strength of the impurities. Analytical arguments for this system have also been given.Comment: File Latex, 8 Figures available on reques

    Recoil effects of photoelectrons in a solid

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    High energy resolution C 1ss photoelectron spectra of graphite were measured at the excitation energy of 340, 870, 5950 and 7940eV using synchrotron radiation. On increasing the excitation energy, i.e., increasing kinetic energy of the photoelectron, the bulk origin C 1ss peak position shifts to higher binding energies. This systematic shift is due to the kinetic energy loss of the high-energy photoelectron by kicking the atom, and is clear evidence of the recoil effect in photoelectron emission. It is also observed that the asymmetric broadening increases for the higher energy photoelectrons. All these recoil effects can be quantified in the same manner as the M\"ossbauer effect for Îł\gamma-ray emission from nuclei embedded in crystals.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure

    Comment on "Exact results for survival probability in the multistate Landau-Zener model"

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    We correct the proof of Brundobler-Elser formula (BEF) provided in [2004 \textit{J. Phys. B: At. Mol. Opt. Phys.} \textbf{37} 4069] and continued in Appendix of [2005 \textit{J. Phys. B: At. Mol. Opt. Phys.} \textbf{38} 907]. After showing that some changes of variables employed in these articles are used erroneously, we propose an alternative change of variables which solves the problem. In our proof, we reveal the connection between the BEF for a general NN-level Landau-Zener system and the exactly solvable bow-tie model. The special importance of the diabatic levels with maximum/minimum slope is emphasized throughout.Comment: 10 page

    Quantum state preparation in circuit QED via Landau-Zener tunneling

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    We study a qubit undergoing Landau-Zener transitions enabled by the coupling to a circuit-QED mode. Summing an infinite-order perturbation series, we determine the exact nonadiabatic transition probability for the qubit, being independent of the frequency of the QED mode. Possible applications are single-photon generation and the controllable creation of qubit-oscillator entanglement.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figure

    Large-amplitude driving of a superconducting artificial atom: Interferometry, cooling, and amplitude spectroscopy

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    Superconducting persistent-current qubits are quantum-coherent artificial atoms with multiple, tunable energy levels. In the presence of large-amplitude harmonic excitation, the qubit state can be driven through one or more of the constituent energy-level avoided crossings. The resulting Landau-Zener-Stueckelberg (LZS) transitions mediate a rich array of quantum-coherent phenomena. We review here three experimental works based on LZS transitions: Mach-Zehnder-type interferometry between repeated LZS transitions, microwave-induced cooling, and amplitude spectroscopy. These experiments exhibit a remarkable agreement with theory, and are extensible to other solid-state and atomic qubit modalities. We anticipate they will find application to qubit state-preparation and control methods for quantum information science and technology.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figure

    Dissipative Landau-Zener transitions of a qubit: bath-specific and universal behavior

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    We study Landau-Zener transitions in a qubit coupled to a bath at zero temperature. A general formula is derived that is applicable to models with a non-degenerate ground state. We calculate exact transition probabilities for a qubit coupled to either a bosonic or a spin bath. The nature of the baths and the qubit-bath coupling is reflected in the transition probabilities. For diagonal coupling, when the bath causes energy fluctuations of the diabatic qubit states but no transitions between them, the transition probability coincides with the standard LZ probability of an isolated qubit. This result is universal as it does not depend on the specific type of bath. For pure off-diagonal coupling, by contrast, the tunneling probability is sensitive to the coupling strength. We discuss the relevance of our results for experiments on molecular nanomagnets, in circuit QED, and for the fast-pulse readout of superconducting phase qubits.Comment: 16 pages, 8 figure

    Counterintuitive transitions in multistate curve crossing involving linear potentials

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    Two problems incorporating a set of horizontal linear potentials crossed by a sloped linear potential are analytically solved and compared with numerical results: (a) the case where boundary conditions are specified at the ends of a finite interval, and (b) the case where the sloped linear potential is replaced by a piecewise-linear sloped potential and the boundary conditions are specified at infinity. In the approximation of small gaps between the horizontal potentials, an approach similar to the one used for the degenerate problem (Yurovsky V A and Ben-Reuven A 1998 J. Phys. B 31,1) is applicable for both problems. The resulting scattering matrix has a form different from the semiclassical result obtained by taking the product of Landau-Zener amplitudes. Counterintuitive transitions involving a pair of successive crossings, in which the second crossing precedes the first one along the direction of motion, are allowed in both models considered here.Comment: LaTeX 2.09 using ioplppt.sty and psfig.sty, 16 pages with 5 figures. Submitted to J. Phys.

    Fast noise in the Landau-Zener theory

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    We study the influence of a fast noise on Landau-Zener transitions. We demonstrate that a fast colored noise much weaker than the conventional white noise can produce transitions itself or can change substantially the Landau-Zener transition probabilities. In the limit of fast colored or strong white noise we derive asymptotically exact formulae for transition probabilities and study the time evolution of a spin coupled to the noise and a sweeping magnetic field.Comment: 28 pages, 5 figure
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