378 research outputs found

    Static and dynamic characteristics of an hydrodynamic journal bearing

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    Hydrodynamic oil film bearings exhibit lateral flexibility which influences the dynamics of rotors they support. This lateral flexibility is specified by coefficients which relate forces generated by the oil film to the instantaneous journal centre velocity and its displacement from an equilibrium position. Previous investigators adopted a linear treatment by taking uniform viscosity with small displacement and velocity increments. Relatively large journal centre velocities are possible in rotating machinery. Therefore, this thesis investigates the non-linear behaviour of these oil film coefficients. Coefficient calculations allowed viscosity to vary with temperature and pressure rendering the governing Reynolds Equation non-linear. A range of positive and negative displacement and velocity increments were examined. Novel experimental techniques have been developed which allow determination of coefficient variation with respective displacement and velocity. Coefficients were deduced from specially chosen, imposed vibration orbits arising from two mutually perpendicular external oscillating forces of variable relative magnitude and phase. Journal centre displacement and velocity were measured using high speed data logging equipment. A unique feature was the ability to obtain, experimental displacement coefficients from the results of both dynamic and incremental loading. It was found necessary to establish the bearing centre separately for each warm-up/load combination. Journal clearance in the hot rotating condition could not be measured to the precision required by its sensitivity to calculated load. Clearance and cavitation zone pressures were deduced from simultaneous predictions of the measured vertical load and attitude angle. Theoretical oil film tensile forces were necessary, a proposition supported by recently published experimental findings. Theoretical results for an equivalent uniform viscosity combined with experimental data gave a simple static locus design procedure. A temperature profile was assumed for theoretical work but choice thereof was found to be not critical. Coefficients are defined in terms of a "zero" value and linear gradient. Using realistic criteria, measured coefficient variation was found to be significant at eccentricity ratios greater than 0.78. Theory adequately predicted most "zero" values but not gradients. It is concluded that improvement in the coefficient prediction willPh

    Collective spin systems in dispersive optical cavity QED: Quantum phase transitions and entanglement

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    We propose a cavity QED setup which implements a dissipative Lipkin-Meshkov-Glick model -- an interacting collective spin system. By varying the external model parameters the system can be made to undergo both first-and second-order quantum phase transitions, which are signified by dramatic changes in cavity output field properties, such as the probe laser transmission spectrum. The steady-state entanglement between pairs of atoms is shown to peak at the critical points and can be experimentally determined by suitable measurements on the cavity output field. The entanglement dynamics also exhibits pronounced variations in the vicinities of the phase transitions.Comment: 19 pages, 18 figures, shortened versio

    Motion-light parametric amplifier and entanglement distributor

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    We propose a scheme for entangling the motional mode of a trapped atom with a propagating light field via a cavity-mediated parametric interaction. We then show that if this light field is subsequently coupled to a second distant atom via a cavity-mediated linear-mixing interaction, it is possible to transfer the entanglement from the light beam to the motional mode of the second atom to create an EPR-type entangled state of the positions and momenta of two distantly-separated atoms.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figures, REVTe

    Efficient routing of single photons by one atom and a microtoroidal cavity

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    Single photons from a coherent input are efficiently redirected to a separate output by way of a fiber-coupled microtoroidal cavity interacting with individual Cesium atoms. By operating in an overcoupled regime for the input-output to a tapered fiber, our system functions as a quantum router with high efficiency for photon sorting. Single photons are reflected and excess photons transmitted, as confirmed by observations of photon antibunching (bunching) for the reflected (transmitted) light. Our photon router is robust against large variations of atomic position and input power, with the observed photon antibunching persisting for intracavity photon number 0.03 \lesssim n \lesssim 0.7

    Multipartite Entanglement and Quantum State Exchange

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    We investigate multipartite entanglement in relation to the theoretical process of quantum state exchange. In particular, we consider such entanglement for a certain pure state involving two groups of N trapped atoms. The state, which can be produced via quantum state exchange, is analogous to the steady-state intracavity state of the subthreshold optical nondegenerate parametric amplifier. We show that, first, it possesses some 2N-way entanglement. Second, we place a lower bound on the amount of such entanglement in the state using a novel measure called the entanglement of minimum bipartite entropy.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figure

    Analysis of dynamical tunnelling experiments with a Bose-Einstein condensate

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    Dynamical tunnelling is a quantum phenomenon where a classically forbidden process occurs, that is prohibited not by energy but by another constant of motion. The phenomenon of dynamical tunnelling has been recently observed in a sodium Bose-Einstein condensate. We present a detailed analysis of these experiments using numerical solutions of the three dimensional Gross-Pitaevskii equation and the corresponding Floquet theory. We explore the parameter dependency of the tunnelling oscillations and we move the quantum system towards the classical limit in the experimentally accessible regime.Comment: accepted for publication in Physical Review

    Thermal Properties of Interacting Bose Fields and Imaginary-Time Stochastic Differential Equations

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    Matsubara Green's functions for interacting bosons are expressed as classical statistical averages corresponding to a linear imaginary-time stochastic differential equation. This makes direct numerical simulations applicable to the study of equilibrium quantum properties of bosons in the non-perturbative regime. To verify our results we discuss an oscillator with quartic anharmonicity as a prototype model for an interacting Bose gas. An analytic expression for the characteristic function in a thermal state is derived and a Higgs-type phase transition discussed, which occurs when the oscillator frequency becomes negative.Comment: Published versio

    Effects of motion in cavity QED

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    We consider effects of motion in cavity quantum electrodynamics experiments where single cold atoms can now be observed inside the cavity for many Rabi cycles. We discuss the timescales involved in the problem and the need for good control of the atomic motion, particularly the heating due to exchange of excitation between the atom and the cavity, in order to realize nearly unitary dynamics of the internal atomic states and the cavity mode which is required for several schemes of current interest such as quantum computing. Using a simple model we establish ultimate effects of the external atomic degrees of freedom on the action of quantum gates. The perfomance of the gate is characterized by a measure based on the entanglement fidelity and the motional excitation caused by the action of the gate is calculated. We find that schemes which rely on adiabatic passage, and are not therefore critically dependent on laser pulse areas, are very much more robust against interaction with the external degrees of freedom of atoms in the quantum gate.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, REVTeX, to be published in Walls Symposium Special Issue of Journal of Optics

    Unusual light spectra from a two-level atom in squeezed vacuum

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    We investigate the interaction of an atom with a multi-channel squeezed vacuum. It turns out that the light coming out in a particular channel can have anomalous spectral properties, among them asymmetry of the spectrum, absence of the central peak as well as central hole burning for particular parameters. As an example plane-wave squeezing is considered. In this case the above phenomena can occur for the light spectra in certain directions. In the total spectrum these phenomena are washed out.Comment: 16 pages, LaTeX, 3 figures (included via epsf

    Cavity Assisted Nondestructive Laser Cooling of Atomic Qubits

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    We analyze two configurations for laser cooling of neutral atoms whose internal states store qubits. The atoms are trapped in an optical lattice which is placed inside a cavity. We show that the coupling of the atoms to the damped cavity mode can provide a mechanism which leads to cooling of the motion without destroying the quantum information.Comment: 12 page
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