2,466 research outputs found
Collapsible reflector Patent
Self erecting parabolic reflector design for use in spac
Quantum-Classical Transition of Photon-Carnot Engine Induced by Quantum Decoherence
We study the physical implementation of the Photon Carnot engine (PCE) based
on the cavity QED system [M. Scully et al, Science, \textbf{299}, 862 (2003)].
Here, we analyze two decoherence mechanisms for the more practical systems of
PCE, the dissipation of photon field and the pure dephasing of the input atoms.
As a result we find that (I) the PCE can work well to some extent even in the
existence of the cavity loss (photon dissipation); and (II) the short-time
atomic dephasing, which can destroy the PCE, is a fatal problem to be overcome.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure
A Bootstrapping Approach for Generating Maximally Path-Entangled Photon States
We propose a bootstrapping approach to generation of maximally path-entangled
states of photons, so called ``NOON states''. Strong atom-light interaction of
cavity QED can be employed to generate NOON states with about 100 photons;
which can then be used to boost the existing experimental Kerr nonlinearities
based on quantum coherence effects to facilitate NOON generation with
arbitrarily large number of photons all within the current experimental state
of the art technology. We also offer an alternative scheme that uses an
atom-cavity dispersive interaction to obtain sufficiently high
Kerr-nonlinearity necessary for arbitrary NOON generation
Phase Coherence in a Driven Double-Well System
We analyze the dynamics of the molecular field incoherently pumped by the
photoassociation of fermionic atoms and coupled by quantum tunnelling in a
double-well potential. The relative phase distribution of the molecular modes
in each well and their phase coherence are shown to build up owing to quantum
mechanical fluctuations starting from the vacuum state. We identify three
qualitatively different steady-state phase distributions, depending on the
ratio of the molecule-molecule interaction strength to interwell tunnelling,
and examine the crossover from a phase-coherent regime to a phase-incoherent
regime as this ratio increases.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
Quantum fluctuations of a vortex in an optical lattice
Using a variational ansatz for the wave function of the Bose-Einstein
condensate, we develop a quantum theory of vortices and quadrupole modes in a
one-dimensional optical lattice. We study the coupling between the quadrupole
modes and Kelvin modes, which turns out to be formally analogous to the theory
of parametric processes in quantum optics. This leads to the possibility of
squeezing vortices. We solve the quantum multimode problem for the Kelvin modes
and quadrupole modes numerically and find properties that cannot be explained
with a simple linear-response theory.Comment: final version, minor change
Multimode quantum limits to the linewidth of an atom laser
The linewidth of an atom laser can be limited by excitation of higher energy
modes in the source Bose-Einstein condensate, energy shifts in that condensate
due to the atomic interactions, or phase diffusion of the lasing mode due to
those interactions. The first two are effects that can be described with a
semiclassical model, and have been studied in detail for both pumped and
unpumped atom lasers. The third is a purely quantum statistical effect, and has
been studied only in zero dimensional models. We examine an unpumped atom laser
in one dimension using a quantum field theory using stochastic methods based on
the truncated Wigner approach. This allows spatial and statistical effects to
be examined simultaneously, and the linewidth limit for unpumped atom lasers is
quantified in various limits.Comment: 8 Figure
Influence of Pure Dephasing on Emission Spectra from Single Photon Sources
We investigate the light-matter interaction of a quantum dot with the
electromagnetic field in a lossy microcavity and calculate emission spectra for
non-zero detuning and dephasing. It is found that dephasing shifts the
intensity of the emission peaks for non-zero detuning. We investigate the
characteristics of this intensity shifting effect and offer it as an
explanation for the non-vanishing emission peaks at the cavity frequency found
in recent experimental work.Comment: Published version, minor change
Quantum theory of a vortex line in an optical lattice
We investigate the quantum theory of a vortex line in a stack of
weakly-coupled two-dimensional Bose-Einstein condensates, that is created by a
one-dimensional optical lattice. We derive the dispersion relation of the
Kelvin modes of the vortex line and also study the coupling between the Kelvin
modes and the quadrupole modes. We solve the coupled dynamics of the vortex
line and the quadrupole modes, both classically as well as quantum
mechanically. The quantum mechanical solution reveals the possibility of
generating nonequilibrium squeezed vortex states by strongly driving the
quadrupole modes.Comment: Minor changes in response to a referee repor
Multi-Stability of Electromagnetically Induced Transparency in Atom-Assisted Optomechanical Cavities
We study how an oscillating mirror affects the electromagnetically induced
transparency (EIT) of an atomic ensemble, which is confined in a gas cell
placed inside a micro-cavity with an oscillating mirror in one end. The
oscillating mirror is modeled as a quantum mechanical harmonic oscillator. The
cavity field acts as a probe light of the EIT system and also produces a light
pressure on the oscillating mirror. The back-action from the mirror to the
cavity field results in several (from one to five) steady-states for this
atom-assisted optomechanical cavity, producing a complex structure in its EIT.
We calculate the susceptibility with respect to the few (from one to three)
stable solutions found here for the equilibrium positions of the oscillating
mirror. We find that the EIT of the atomic ensemble can be significantly
changed by the oscillating mirror, and also that the various steady states of
the mirror have different effects on the EIT.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figure
Teleportation of entangled states without Bell-state measurement
In a recent paper [Phys. Rev. A 70, 025803 (2004)] we presented a scheme to
teleport an entanglement of zero- and one-photon states from a bimodal cavity
to another one, with 100% success probability. Here, inspired on recent results
in the literature, we have modified our previous proposal to teleport the same
entangled state without using Bell-state measurements. For comparison, the time
spent, the fidelity, and the success probability for this teleportation are
considered.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, published in Phys. Rev. A 72, 045802 (2005
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