3,250 research outputs found
Path integral in a magnetic field using the Trotter product formula
The derivation of the Feynman path integral based on the Trotter product
formula is extended to the case where the system is in a magnetic field.Comment: To appear in the American Journal of Physics, 200
Stability of quantum breathers
Using two methods we show that a quantized discrete breather in a 1-D lattice
is stable. One method uses path integrals and compares correlations for a
(linear) local mode with those of the quantum breather. The other takes a local
mode as the zeroth order system relative to which numerical, cutoff-insensitive
diagonalization of the Hamiltonian is performed.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Observing trajectories with weak measurements in quantum systems in the semiclassical regime
We propose a scheme allowing to observe the evolution of a quantum system in
the semiclassical regime along the paths generated by the propagator. The
scheme relies on performing consecutive weak measurements of the position. We
show how weak trajectories" can be extracted from the pointers of a series of
measurement devices having weakly interacted with the system. The properties of
these "weak trajectories" are investigated and illustrated in the case of a
time-dependent model system.Comment: v2: Several minor corrections were made. Added Appendix (that will
appear as Suppl. Material). To be published in Phys Rev Let
Slow relaxation, confinement, and solitons
Millisecond crystal relaxation has been used to explain anomalous decay in
doped alkali halides. We attribute this slowness to Fermi-Pasta-Ulam solitons.
Our model exhibits confinement of mechanical energy released by excitation.
Extending the model to long times is justified by its relation to solitons,
excitations previously proposed to occur in alkali halides. Soliton damping and
observation are also discussed
Analysis of a three-component model phase diagram by Catastrophe Theory
We analyze the thermodynamical potential of a lattice gas model with three
components and five parameters using the methods of Catastrophe Theory. We find
the highest singularity, which has codimension five, and establish its
transversality. Hence the corresponding seven-degree Landau potential, the
canonical form Wigwam or , constitutes the adequate starting point to
study the overall phase diagram of this model.Comment: 16 pages, Latex file, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Efficiency of a thermodynamic motor at maximum power
Several recent theories address the efficiency of a macroscopic thermodynamic
motor at maximum power and question the so-called "Curzon-Ahlborn (CA)
efficiency." Considering the entropy exchanges and productions in an n-sources
motor, we study the maximization of its power and show that the controversies
are partly due to some imprecision in the maximization variables. When power is
maximized with respect to the system temperatures, these temperatures are
proportional to the square root of the corresponding source temperatures, which
leads to the CA formula for a bi-thermal motor. On the other hand, when power
is maximized with respect to the transitions durations, the Carnot efficiency
of a bi-thermal motor admits the CA efficiency as a lower bound, which is
attained if the duration of the adiabatic transitions can be neglected.
Additionally, we compute the energetic efficiency, or "sustainable efficiency,"
which can be defined for n sources, and we show that it has no other universal
upper bound than 1, but that in certain situations, favorable for power
production, it does not exceed 1/2
Huygens-Fresnel-Kirchhoff construction for quantum propagators with application to diffraction in space and time
We address the phenomenon of diffraction of non-relativistic matter waves on openings in absorbing screens. To this end, we expand the full quantum propagator, connecting two points on the opposite sides of the screen, in terms of the free particle propagator and spatio-temporal properties of the opening. Our construction, based on the Huygens-Fresnel principle, describes the quantum phenomena of diffraction in space and diffraction in time, as well as the interplay between the two. We illustrate the method by calculating diffraction patterns for localized wave packets passing through various time-dependent openings in one and two spatial dimensions
Polarization Requirements for Ensemble Implementations of Quantum Algorithms with a Single Bit Output
We compare the failure probabilities of ensemble implementations of quantum
algorithms which use pseudo-pure initial states, quantified by their
polarization, to those of competing classical probabilistic algorithms.
Specifically we consider a class algorithms which require only one bit to
output the solution to problems. For large ensemble sizes, we present a general
scheme to determine a critical polarization beneath which the quantum algorithm
fails with greater probability than its classical competitor. We apply this to
the Deutsch-Jozsa algorithm and show that the critical polarization is 86.6%.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figure
Decay of Quantum Accelerator Modes
Experimentally observable Quantum Accelerator Modes are used as a test case
for the study of some general aspects of quantum decay from classical stable
islands immersed in a chaotic sea. The modes are shown to correspond to
metastable states, analogous to the Wannier-Stark resonances. Different regimes
of tunneling, marked by different quantitative dependence of the lifetimes on
1/hbar, are identified, depending on the resolution of KAM substructures that
is achieved on the scale of hbar. The theory of Resonance Assisted Tunneling
introduced by Brodier, Schlagheck, and Ullmo [9], is revisited, and found to
well describe decay whenever applicable.Comment: 16 pages, 11 encapsulated postscript figures (figures with a better
resolution are available upon request to the authors); added reference for
section
Exact propagators on the lattice with applications to diffractive effects
The propagator of the discrete Schr\"odinger equation is computed and its
properties are revealed through a Feynman path summation in discrete space.
Initial data problems such as diffraction in discrete space and continuous time
are studied analytically by the application of the new propagator. In the
second part of this paper, the analogy between time propagation and 2D
scattering by 1D obstacles is explored. New results are given in the context of
diffraction by edges within a periodic medium. A connection with tight-binding
arrays and photonic crystals is indicated.Comment: Final version with two appendices. Published in J. Phys. A: Math.
Theo
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