74 research outputs found
Optical squeezing of a mechanical oscillator by dispersive interaction
We consider a small partially reflecting vibrating mirror coupled
dispersively to a single optical mode of a high finesse cavity. We show this
arrangement can be used to implement quantum squeezing of the mechanically
oscillating mirror.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figure
Entanglement of a Laguerre-Gaussian cavity mode with a rotating mirror
It has previously been shown theoretically that the exchange of linear
momentum between the light field in an optical cavity and a vibrating end
mirror can entangle the electromagnetic field with the vibrational motion of
that mirror. In this paper we consider the rotational analog of this situation
and show that radiation torque can similarly entangle a Laguerre-Gaussian
cavity mode with a rotating end mirror. We examine the mirror-field
entanglement as a function of ambient temperature, radiation detuning and
orbital angular momentum carried by the cavity mode.Comment: 5 figures, 1 table, submitted to Phys.Rev.
Entangling the ro-vibrational modes of a macroscopic mirror using radiation pressure
We consider the dynamics of a vibrating and rotating end-mirror of an optical
Fabry-P{\'erot} cavity that can sustain Laguerre-Gaussian modes. We demonstrate
theoretically that since the intra-cavity field carries linear as well as
angular momentum, radiation pressure can create bipartite entanglement between
a vibrational and a rotational mode of the mirror. Further we show that the
ratio of vibrational and rotational couplings with the radiation field can
easily be adjusted experimentally, which makes the generation and detection of
entanglement robust to uncertainties in the cavity manufacture. This
constitutes the first proposal to demonstrate entanglement between two
qualitatively different degrees of freedom of the same macroscopic object.Comment: 3 figure
An Explicit Bound for Dynamical Localisation in an Interacting Many-Body System
We characterise and study dynamical localisation of a finite interacting
quantum many-body system. We present explicit bounds on the disorder strength
required for the onset of localisation of the dynamics of arbitrary ensemble of
sites of the XYZ spin-1/2 model. We obtain these results using a novel form of
the fractional moment criterion, which we establish, together with a
generalisation of the self-avoiding walk representation of the system Green's
functions, called path-sums. These techniques are not specific to the XYZ model
and hold in a much more general setting. We further present bounds for two
observable quantities in the localised regime: the magnetisation of any
sublattice of the system as well as the linear magnetic response function of
the system. We confirm our results through numerical simulations.Comment: 35 pages; 5 figure
Enhanced heterogeneously catalyzed Suzuki–Miyaura reaction over SiliaCat Pd(0)
The SiliaCat Pd(0) solid catalyst can be efficiently employed in the Suzuki–Miyaura cross-coupling of an ample variety of haloarenes, including economically viable chloroarenes. The catalyst can be extensively recycled without loss of activity and with low leaching of valued palladium, opening the route to widespread utilization of the method to afford high yields of biaryls devoid of contaminating by-products
Distribution of shortest cycle lengths in random networks
We present analytical results for the distribution of shortest cycle lengths
(DSCL) in random networks. The approach is based on the relation between the
DSCL and the distribution of shortest path lengths (DSPL). We apply this
approach to configuration model networks, for which analytical results for the
DSPL were obtained before. We first calculate the fraction of nodes in the
network which reside on at least one cycle. Conditioning on being on a cycle,
we provide the DSCL over ensembles of configuration model networks with degree
distributions which follow a Poisson distribution (Erdos-R\'enyi network),
degenerate distribution (random regular graph) and a power-law distribution
(scale-free network). The mean and variance of the DSCL are calculated. The
analytical results are found to be in very good agreement with the results of
computer simulations.Comment: 44 pages, 11 figure
A centrality measure for cycles and subgraphs II
In a recent work we introduced a measure of importance for groups of vertices in a complex network. This centrality for groups is always between 0 and 1 and induces the eigenvector centrality over vertices. Furthermore, its value over any group is the fraction of all network flows intercepted by this group. Here we provide the rigorous mathematical constructions underpinning these results via a semi-commutative extension of a number theoretic sieve. We then established further relations between the eigenvector centrality and the centrality proposed here, showing that the latter is a proper extension of the former to groups of nodes. We finish by comparing the centrality proposed here with the notion of group-centrality introduced by Everett and Borgatti on two real-world networks: the Wolfe’s dataset and the protein-protein interaction network of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. In this latter case, we demonstrate that the centrality is able to distinguish protein complexe
Universal time-evolution of a Rydberg lattice gas with perfect blockade
We investigate the dynamics of a strongly interacting spin system that is
motivated by current experimental realizations of strongly interacting Rydberg
gases in lattices. In particular we are interested in the temporal evolution of
quantities such as the density of Rydberg atoms and density-density
correlations when the system is initialized in a fully polarized state without
Rydberg excitations. We show that in the thermodynamic limit the expectation
values of these observables converge at least logarithmically to universal
functions and outline a method to obtain these functions. We prove that a
finite one-dimensional system follows this universal behavior up to a given
time. The length of this universal time period depends on the actual system
size. This shows that already the study of small systems allows to make precise
predictions about the thermodynamic limit provided that the observation time is
sufficiently short. We discuss this for various observables and for systems
with different dimensions, interaction ranges and boundary conditions.Comment: 16 pages, 3 figure
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