412 research outputs found
Comment on ``Phase and Phase Diffusion of a Split Bose-Einstein Condensate''
Recently Javanainen and Wilkens [Phys. Rev. Lett. 78, 4675 (1997)] have
analysed an experiment in which an interacting Bose condensate, after being
allowed to form in a single potential well, is "cut" by splitting the well
adiabatically with a very high potential barrier, and estimate the rate at
which, following the cut, the two halves of the condensate lose the "memory" of
their relative phase. We argue that, by neglecting the effect of interactions
in the initial state before the separation, they have overestimated the rate of
phase randomization by a numerical factor which grows with the interaction
strength and with the slowness of the separation process.Comment: 2 pages, no figures, to appear in Phys. Rev. Let
Supercurrent flow through an effective double barrier structure
Supercurrent flow is studied in a structure that in the Ginzburg-Landau
regime can be described in terms of an effective double barrier potential. In
the limit of strongly reflecting barriers, the passage of Cooper pairs through
such a structure may be viewed as a realization of resonant tunneling with a
rigid wave function. For interbarrier distances smaller than no
current-carrying solutions exist. For distances between and , four
solutions exist. The two symmetric solutions obey a current-phase relation of
, while the two asymmetric solutions satisfy
for all allowed values of the current. As the distance
exceeds , a new group of four solutions appears, each contaning
soliton-type oscillations between the barriers. We prove the inexistence of a
continuous crossover between the physical solutions of the nonlinear
Ginzburg-Landau equation and those of the corresponding linearized
Schr\"odinger equation. We also show that under certain conditions a repulsive
delta function barrier may quantitatively describe a SNS structure. We are thus
able to predict that the critical current of a SNSNS structure vanishes as
, where is lower than the bulk critical temperature.Comment: 20 pages, RevTex, to appear in Phys. Rev. B, 6 figures on request at
[email protected]
Tunneling, self-trapping and manipulation of higher modes of a BEC in a double well
We consider an atomic Bose-Einstein condensate trapped in a symmetric
one-dimensional double well potential in the four-mode approximation and show
that the semiclassical dynamics of the two ground state modes can be strongly
influenced by a macroscopic occupation of the two excited modes. In particular,
the addition of the two excited modes already unveils features related to the
effect of dissipation on the condensate. In general, we find a rich dynamics
that includes Rabi oscillations, a mixed Josephson-Rabi regime, self-trapping,
chaotic behavior, and the existence of fixed points. We investigate how the
dynamics of the atoms in the excited modes can be manipulated by controlling
the atomic populations of the ground states.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figure
Genuine phase diffusion of a Bose-Einstein condensate in the microcanonical ensemble: A classical field study
Within the classical field model, we find that the phase of a Bose-Einstein
condensate undergoes a true diffusive motion in the microcanonical ensemble,
the variance of the condensate phase change between time zero and time
growing linearly in . The phase diffusion coefficient obeys a simple scaling
law in the double thermodynamic and Bogoliubov limit. We construct an
approximate calculation of the diffusion coefficient, in fair agreement with
the numerical results over the considered temperature range, and we extend this
approximate calculation to the quantum field.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figure
Dissipation-driven quantum phase transitions in a Tomonaga-Luttinger liquid electrostatically coupled to a metallic gate
The dissipation induced by a metallic gate on the low-energy properties of
interacting 1D electron liquids is studied. As function of the distance to the
gate, or the electron density in the wire, the system undergoes a quantum phase
transition from the Tomonaga-Luttinger liquid state to two kinds of dissipative
phases, one of them with a finite spatial correlation length. We also define a
dual model, which describes an attractive one dimensional metal with a
Josephson coupling to a dirty metallic lead.Comment: 5 pages, 2 EPS figures; v2: improved figure for phase diagram, added
discussion, corrected typo
Expansion of matter waves in static and driven periodic potentials
We study the non-equilibrium dynamics of cold atoms held in an optical
lattice potential. The expansion of an initially confined atom cloud occurs in
two phases: an initial quadratic expansion followed by a ballistic behaviour at
long times. Accounting for this gives a good description of recent experimental
results, and provides a robust method to extract the effective intersite
tunneling from time-of-flight measurements.Comment: 4 pages, 3 eps figure
Coulomb blockade in graphene nanoribbons
We propose that recent transport experiments revealing the existence of an
energy gap in graphene nanoribbons may be understood in terms of Coulomb
blockade. Electron interactions play a decisive role at the quantum dots which
form due to the presence of necks arising from the roughness of the graphene
edge. With the average transmission as the only fitting parameter, our theory
shows good agreement with the experimental data.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Andreev reflection in bosonic condensates
We study the bosonic analog of Andreev reflection at a normal-superfluid
interface where the superfluid is a boson condensate. We model the normal
region as a zone where nonlinear effects can be neglected. Against the
background of a decaying condensate, we identify a novel contribution to the
current of reflected atoms. The group velocity of this Andreev reflected
component differs from that of the normally reflected one. For a
three-dimensional planar or two-dimensional linear interface Andreev reflection
is neither specular nor conjugate.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures. Text revise
Split vortices in optically coupled Bose-Einstein condensates
We study a rotating two-component Bose-Einstein condensate in which an
optically induced Josephson coupling allows for population transfer between the
two species. In a regime where separation of species is favored, the ground
state of the rotating system displays domain walls with velocity fields normal
to them. Such a configuration looks like a vortex split into two halves, with
atoms circulating around the vortex and changing their internal state in a
continuous way.Comment: 4 EPS pictures, 4 pages; Some errata have been corrected and thep
resentation has been slightly revise
Absence of charge backscattering in the nonequilibrium current of normal-superconductor structures
We study the nonequilibrium transport properties of a
normal-superconductor-normal structure, focussing on the effect of adding an
impurity in the superconducting region. Current conservation requires the
superfluid velocity to be nonzero, causing a distortion of the quasiparticle
dispersion relation within the superconductor. For weakly reflecting interfaces
we find a regime of intermediate voltages in which Andreev transmission is the
only permitted mechanism for quasiparticles to enter the superconductor.
Impurities in the superconductor can only cause Andreev reflection of these
quasiparticles and thus cannot degrade the current. At higher voltages, a state
of gapless superconductivity develops which is sensitive to the presence of
impurities.Comment: Latex file, 11 pages, 2 figures available upon request
[email protected], to be published in Journal of Physics: Condensed Matte
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