568 research outputs found
Gauge-potential approach to the kinematics of a moving car
A kinematics of the motion of a car is reformulated in terms of the theory of
gauge potentials (connection on principal bundle). E(2)-connection originates
in the no-slipping contact of the car with a road.Comment: 13 pages, AmsTe
Manifestation of a nonclassical Berry phase of an electromagnetic field in atomic Ramsey interference
The Berry phase acquired by an electromagnetic field undergoing an adiabatic
and cyclic evolution in phase space is a purely quantum-mechanical effect of
the field. However, this phase is usually accompanied by a dynamical
contribution and cannot be manifested in any light-beam interference experiment
because it is independent of the field state. We here show that such a phase
can be produced using an atom coupled to a quantized field and driven by a
slowly changing classical field, and it is manifested in atomic Ramsey
interference oscillations. We also show how this effect may be applied to
one-step implementation of multiqubit geometric phase gates, which is
impossible by previous geometric methods. The effects of dissipation and
fluctuations in the parameters of the pump field on the Berry phase and
visibility of the Ramsey interference fringes are analyzed
Minimal Uncertainty in Momentum: The Effects of IR Gravity on Quantum Mechanics
The effects of the IR aspects of gravity on quantum mechanics is
investigated. At large distances where due to gravity the space-time is curved,
there appears nonzero minimal uncertainty in the momentum of a
quantum mechanical particle. We apply the minimal uncertainty momentum to some
quantum mechanical interferometry examples and show that the phase shift
depends on the area surrounded by the path of the test particle . We also put
some limits on the related parameters. This prediction may be tested through
future experiments. The assumption of minimal uncertainty in momentum can also
explain the anomalous excess of the mass of the Cooper pair in a rotating thin
superconductor ring.Comment: 8 pages, revised version accepted by PR
Non-adiabatic Arbitary Geometric Gates in 2-qubit NMR Model
We study a 2-qubit nuclear spin system for realizing an arbitrary geometric
quantum phase gate by means of non-adiabatic operation. A single magnetic pulse
with multi harmonic frequencies is applied to manipulate the quantum states of
2-qubit instantly. Using resonant transition approximation, the time dependent
Hamiltonian of two nuclear spins can be solved analytically. The time evolution
of the wave function is obtained without adiabatic approximation. The
parameters of magnetic pulse, such as the frequency, amplitude, phase of each
harmonic part as well as the time duration of the pulse, are determined for
achieving an arbitrary non-adiabatic geometric phase gate. The derivation of
non-adiabatic geometric controlled phase gates and A-A phase are also
addressed.Comment: 7 pages, 1 figur
Geometric phases in dressed state quantum computation
Geometric phases arise naturally in a variety of quantum systems with
observable consequences. They also arise in quantum computations when dressed
states are used in gating operations. Here we show how they arise in these
gating operations and how one may take advantage of the dressed states
producing them. Specifically, we show that that for a given, but arbitrary
Hamiltonian, and at an arbitrary time {\tau}, there always exists a set of
dressed states such that a given gate operation can be performed by the
Hamiltonian up to a phase {\phi}. The phase is a sum of a dynamical phase and a
geometric phase. We illustrate the new phase for several systems.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Classical Time Crystals
We consider the possibility that classical dynamical systems display motion
in their lowest energy state, forming a time analogue of crystalline spatial
order. Challenges facing that idea are identified and overcome. We display
arbitrary orbits of an angular variable as lowest-energy trajectories for
nonsingular Lagrangian systems. Dynamics within orbits of broken symmetry
provide a natural arena for formation of time crystals. We exhibit models of
that kind, including a model with traveling density waves.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figur
A new perturbative approach to the adiabatic approximation
A new and intuitive perturbative approach to time-dependent quantum mechanics
problems is presented, which is useful in situations where the evolution of the
Hamiltonian is slow. The state of a system which starts in an instantaneous
eigenstate of the initial Hamiltonian is written as a power series which has a
straightforward diagrammatic representation. Each term of the series
corresponds to a sequence of "adiabatic" evolutions, during which the system
remains in an instantaneous eigenstate of the Hamiltonian, punctuated by
transitions from one state to another. The first term of this series is the
standard adiabatic evolution, the next is the well-known first correction to
it, and subsequent terms can be written down essentially by inspection.
Although the final result is perhaps not terribly surprising, it seems to be
not widely known, and the interpretation is new, as far as we know. Application
of the method to the adiabatic approximation is given, and some discussion of
the validity of this approximation is presented.Comment: 9 pages. Added references, discussion of previous results, expanded
upon discussion of main result and application of i
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