1,953 research outputs found
Quantum limited measurements of atomic scattering properties
We propose a method to perform precision measurements of the interaction
parameters in systems of N ultra-cold spin 1/2 atoms. The spectroscopy is
realized by first creating a coherent spin superposition of the two relevant
internal states of each atom and then letting the atoms evolve under a
squeezing Hamiltonian. The non-linear nature of the Hamiltonian decreases the
fundamental limit imposed by the Heisenberg uncertainty principle to N^(-2), a
factor of N smaller than the fundamental limit achievable with non-interacting
atoms. We study the effect of decoherence and show that even with decoherence,
entangled states can outperform the signal to noise limit of non-entangled
states. We present two possible experimental implementations of the method
using Bose-Einstein spinor condensates and fermionic atoms loaded in optical
lattices and discuss their advantages and disadvantages.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures. References adde
Dynamical Crystallization in the Dipole Blockade of Ultracold Atoms
We describe a method for controlling many-body states in extended ensembles
of Rydberg atoms, forming crystalline structures during laser excitation of a
frozen atomic gas. Specifically, we predict the existence of an excitation
number staircase in laser excitation of atomic ensembles into Rydberg states.
Each step corresponds to a crystalline state with a well-defined of regularly
spaced Rydberg atoms. We show that such states can be selectively excited by
chirped laser pulses. Finally, we demonstarte that, sing quantum state transfer
from atoms to light, such crystals can be used to create crystalline photonic
states and can be probed via photon correlation measurements
Electron spin decoherence of single Nitrogen-Vacancy defects in diamond
We present a theoretical analysis of the electron spin decoherence in single
Nitrogen-Vacancy defects in ultra-pure diamond. The electron spin decoherence
is due to the interactions with Carbon-13 nuclear spins in the diamond lattice.
Our approach takes advantage of the low concentration (1.1%) of Carbon-13 and
their random distribution in the diamond lattice by an algorithmic aggregation
of spins into small, strongly interacting groups. By making use of this
\emph{disjoint cluster} approach, we demonstrate a possibility of non-trival
dynamics of the electron spin that can not be described by a single time
constant. This dependance is caused by a strong coupling between the electron
and few nuclei and results, in particular, in a substantial echo signal even at
microsecond time scales. Our results are in good agreement with recent
experimental observations
Photon sorters and QND detectors using single photon emitters
We discuss a new method for realizing number-resolving and non-demolition
photo detectors by strong coupling of light to individual single photon
emitters, which act as strong optical non-linearities. As a specific
application we show how these elements can be integrated into an error-proof
Bell state analyzer, whose efficiency exceeds the best possible performance
with linear optics even for a modest atom-field coupling. The methods are
error-proof in the sense that every detection event unambiguously projects the
photon state onto a Fock or Bell state.Comment: revised and enlarged version, 6+ pages, 5 figure
Quantum storage via refractive index control
Off-resonant Raman interaction of a single-photon wave packet and a classical
control field in an atomic medium with controlled refractive index is
investigated. It is shown that a continuous change of refractive index during
the interaction leads to the mapping of a single photon state to a
superposition of atomic collective excitations (spin waves) with different wave
vectors and visa versa. The suitability of refractive index control for
developing multichannel quantum memories is discussed and possible schemes of
implementation are considered.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figure
A fast and robust approach to long-distance quantum communication with atomic ensembles
Quantum repeaters create long-distance entanglement between quantum systems
while overcoming difficulties such as the attenuation of single photons in a
fiber. Recently, an implementation of a repeater protocol based on single
qubits in atomic ensembles and linear optics has been proposed [Nature 414, 413
(2001)]. Motivated by rapid experimental progress towards implementing that
protocol, here we develop a more efficient scheme compatible with active
purification of arbitrary errors. Using similar resources as the earlier
protocol, our approach intrinsically purifies leakage out of the logical
subspace and all errors within the logical subspace, leading to greatly
improved performance in the presence of experimental inefficiencies. Our
analysis indicates that our scheme could generate approximately one pair per 3
minutes over 1280 km distance with fidelity (F>78%) sufficient to violate
Bell's inequality.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, 5 tables (Two appendixes are added to justify
two claims used in the maintext.
Temporal and Spatial Turbulent Spectra of MHD Plasma and an Observation of Variance Anisotropy
The nature of MHD turbulence is analyzed through both temporal and spatial
magnetic fluctuation spectra. A magnetically turbulent plasma is produced in
the MHD wind-tunnel configuration of the Swarthmore Spheromak Experiment (SSX).
The power of magnetic fluctuations is projected into directions perpendicular
and parallel to a local mean field; the ratio of these quantities shows the
presence of variance anisotropy which varies as a function of frequency.
Comparison amongst magnetic, velocity, and density spectra are also made,
demonstrating that the energy of the turbulence observed is primarily seeded by
magnetic fields created during plasma production. Direct spatial spectra are
constructed using multi-channel diagnostics and are used to compare to
frequency spectra converted to spatial scales using the Taylor Hypothesis.
Evidence for the observation of dissipation due to ion inertial length scale
physics is also discussed as well as the role laboratory experiment can play in
understanding turbulence typically studied in space settings such as the solar
wind. Finally, all turbulence results are shown to compare fairly well to a
Hall-MHD simulation of the experiment.Comment: 17 pages, 17 figures, Submitted to Astrophysical Journa
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