900 research outputs found
Effective Field Theory Approach to Gravitationally Induced Decoherence
Adopting the viewpoint that the standard perturbative quantization of general
relativity provides an effective description of quantum gravity that is valid
at ordinary energies, we show that gravity as an environment induces the rapid
decoherence of stationary matter superposition states when the energy
differences in the superposition exceed the Planck energy scale.Comment: 4 page
Decoherence and Recoherence in a Vibrating RF SQUID
We study an RF SQUID, in which a section of the loop is a freely suspended
beam that is allowed to oscillate mechanically. The coupling between the RF
SQUID and the mechanical resonator originates from the dependence of the total
magnetic flux threading the loop on the displacement of the resonator. Motion
of the latter affects the visibility of Rabi oscillations between the two
lowest energy states of the RF SQUID. We address the feasibility of
experimental observation of decoherence and recoherence, namely decay and rise
of the visibility, in such a system.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figure
Toy models for gravitational and scalar QED decoherence
We investigate the dynamics of two quantum mechanical oscillator system-bath
toy models obtained by dimensionally truncating linearized gravity coupled to a
massive scalar field and scalar QED. The scalar-gravity toy model maps onto the
phase damped oscillator, while the scalar QED toy model approximately maps onto
an oscillator system subject to two-photon damping. The toy models provide
potentially useful insights into solving for open system quantum dynamics
relevant to the full scalar QED and weak gravitational field systems, in
particular the decoherence of initial scalar field system superposition states
Ultra-Strong Optomechanics Incorporating the Dynamical Casimir Effect
We propose a superconducting circuit comprising a dc-SQUID with mechanically
compliant arm embedded in a coplanar microwave cavity that realizes an
optomechanical system with a degenerate or non-degenerate parametric
interaction generated via the dynamical Casimir effect. For experimentally
feasible parameters, this setup is capable of reaching the single-photon,
ultra-strong coupling regime, while simultaneously possessing a parametric
coupling strength approaching the renormalized cavity frequency. This opens up
the possibility of observing the interplay between these two fundamental
nonlinearities at the single-photon level.Comment: 7 pages, 1 figure, 1 tabl
Mesoscopic Mechanical Resonators as Quantum Non-Inertial Reference Frames
An atom attached to a micrometer-scale wire that is vibrating at a frequency
of 100 MHz and with displacement amplitude 1 nm experiences an acceleration
magnitude 10^9 ms^-2, approaching the surface gravity of a neutron star. As one
application of such extreme non-inertial forces in a mesoscopic setting, we
consider a model two-path atom interferometer with one path consisting of the
100 MHz vibrating wire atom guide. The vibrating wire guide serves as a
non-inertial reference frame and induces an in principle measurable phase shift
in the wave function of an atom traversing the wire frame. We furthermore
consider the effect on the two-path atom wave interference when the vibrating
wire is modeled as a quantum object, hence functioning as a quantum
non-inertial reference frame. We outline a possible realization of the
vibrating wire, atom interferometer using a superfluid helium quantum
interference setup.Comment: Published versio
Dynamics of a nanomechanical resonator coupled to a superconducting single-electron transistor
We present an analysis of the dynamics of a nanomechanical resonator coupled
to a superconducting single electron transistor (SSET) in the vicinity of the
Josephson quasiparticle (JQP) and double Josephson quasiparticle (DJQP)
resonances. For weak coupling and wide separation of dynamical timescales, we
find that for either superconducting resonance the dynamics of the resonator is
given by a Fokker-Planck equation, i.e., the SSET behaves effectively as an
equilibrium heat bath, characterised by an effective temperature, which also
damps the resonator and renormalizes its frequency. Depending on the gate and
drain-source voltage bias points with respect to the superconducting resonance,
the SSET can also give rise to an instability in the mechanical resonator
marked by negative damping and temperature within the appropriate Fokker-Planck
equation. Furthermore, sufficiently close to a resonance, we find that the
Fokker-Planck description breaks down. We also point out that there is a close
analogy between coupling a nanomechanical resonator to a SSET in the vicinity
of the JQP resonance and Doppler cooling of atoms by means of lasers
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