824 research outputs found
Dynamical Casimir-Polder energy between an excited and a ground-state atom
We consider the Casimir-Polder interaction between two atoms, one in the
ground state and the other in its excited state. The interaction is
time-dependent for this system, because of the dynamical self-dressing and the
spontaneous decay of the excited atom. We calculate the dynamical
Casimir-Polder potential between the two atoms using an effective Hamiltonian
approach. The results obtained and their physical meaning are discussed and
compared with previous results based on a time-independent approach which uses
a non-normalizable dressed state for the excited atom.Comment: 11 page
Field fluctuations near a conducting plate and Casimir-Polder forces in the presence of boundary conditions
We consider vacuum fluctuations of the quantum electromagnetic field in the
presence of an infinite and perfectly conducting plate. We evaluate how the
change of vacuum fluctuations due to the plate modifies the Casimir-Polder
potential between two atoms placed near the plate. We use two different methods
to evaluate the Casimir-Polder potential in the presence of the plate. They
also give new insights on the role of boundary conditions in the Casimir-Polder
interatomic potential, as well as indications for possible generalizations to
more complicated boundary conditions.Comment: 10 page
Moving Atom-Field Interaction: Correction to Casimir-Polder Effect from Coherent Back-action
The Casimir-Polder force is an attractive force between a polarizable atom
and a conducting or dielectric boundary. Its original computation was in terms
of the Lamb shift of the atomic ground state in an electromagnetic field (EMF)
modified by boundary conditions along the wall and assuming a stationary atom.
We calculate the corrections to this force due to a moving atom, demanding
maximal preservation of entanglement generated by the moving atom-conducting
wall system. We do this by using non-perturbative path integral techniques
which allow for coherent back-action and thus can treat non-Markovian
processes. We recompute the atom-wall force for a conducting boundary by
allowing the bare atom-EMF ground state to evolve (or self-dress) into the
interacting ground state. We find a clear distinction between the cases of
stationary and adiabatic motions. Our result for the retardation correction for
adiabatic motion is up to twice as much as that computed for stationary atoms.
We give physical interpretations of both the stationary and adiabatic atom-wall
forces in terms of alteration of the virtual photon cloud surrounding the atom
by the wall and the Doppler effect.Comment: 16 pages, 2 figures, clarified discussions; to appear in Phys. Rev.
Dynamics of correlations due to a phase noisy laser
We analyze the dynamics of various kinds of correlations present between two
initially entangled independent qubits, each one subject to a local phase noisy
laser. We give explicit expressions of the relevant quantifiers of correlations
for the general case of single-qubit unital evolution, which includes the case
of a phase noisy laser. Although the light field is treated as classical, we
find that this model can describe revivals of quantum correlations. Two
different dynamical regimes of decay of correlations occur, a Markovian one
(exponential decay) and a non-Markovian one (oscillatory decay with revivals)
depending on the values of system parameters. In particular, in the
non-Markovian regime, quantum correlations quantified by quantum discord show
an oscillatory decay faster than that of classical correlations. Moreover,
there are time regions where nonzero discord is present while entanglement is
zero.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in Phys. Scripta,
special issue for CEWQO 2011 proceeding
Initial correlations effects on decoherence at zero temperature
We consider a free charged particle interacting with an electromagnetic bath
at zero temperature. The dipole approximation is used to treat the bath
wavelengths larger than the width of the particle wave packet. The effect of
these wavelengths is described then by a linear Hamiltonian whose form is
analogous to phenomenological Hamiltonians previously adopted to describe the
free particle-bath interaction. We study how the time dependence of decoherence
evolution is related with initial particle-bath correlations. We show that
decoherence is related to the time dependent dressing of the particle. Moreover
because decoherence induced by the T=0 bath is very rapid, we make some
considerations on the conditions under which interference may be experimentally
observed.Comment: 16 pages, 1 figur
Entanglement Trapping in Structured Environments
The entanglement dynamics of two independent qubits each embedded in a
structured environment under conditions of inhibition of spontaneous emission
is analyzed, showing entanglement trapping. We demonstrate that entanglement
trapping can be used efficiently to prevent entanglement sudden death. For the
case of realistic photonic band-gap materials, we show that high values of
entanglement trapping can be achieved. This result is of both fundamental and
applicative interest since it provides a physical situation where the
entanglement can be preserved and manipulated, e.g. by Stark-shifting the qubit
transition frequency outside and inside the gap.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev. Lett. on Friday 16 May
200
Tripartite entanglement dynamics in a system of strongly driven qubits
We study the dynamics of tripartite entanglement in a system of two strongly
driven qubits individually coupled to a dissipative cavity. We aim at
explanation of the previously noted entanglement revival between two qubits in
this system. We show that the periods of entanglement loss correspond to the
strong tripartite entanglement between the qubits and the cavity and the
recovery has to do with an inverse process. We demonstrate that the overall
process of qubit-qubit entanglement loss is due to the second order coupling to
the external continuum which explains the exp[-g^2 t/2+g^2 k t^3/6+\cdot] for
of the entanglement loss reported previously.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figure
Dynamics of Entanglement and Bell-nonlocality for Two Stochastic Qubits with Dipole-Dipole Interaction
We have studied the analytical dynamics of Bell nonlocality as measured by
CHSH inequality and entanglement as measured by concurrence for two noisy
qubits that have dipole-dipole interaction. The nonlocal entanglement created
by the dipole-dipole interaction is found to be protected from sudden death for
certain initial states
Quantum optical dipole radiation fields
We introduce quantum optical dipole radiation fields defined in terms of photon creation and annihilation operators. These fields are identified through their spatial dependence, as the components of the total fields that survive infinitely far from the dipole source. We use these radiation fields to perturbatively evaluate the electromagnetic radiated energy-flux of the excited dipole. Our results indicate that the standard interpretation of a bare atom surrounded by a localised virtual photon cloud, is difficult to sustain, because the radiated energy-flux surviving infinitely far from the source contains virtual contributions. It follows that there is a clear distinction to be made between a radiative photon defined in terms of the radiation fields and a real photon, whose identification depends on whether or not a given process conserves the free energy. This free energy is represented by the difference between the total dipole-field Hamiltonian and its interaction component
Dynamics of quantum correlations in two-qubit systems within non-Markovian environments
Knowledge of the dynamical behavior of correlations with no classical
counterpart, like entanglement, nonlocal correlations and quantum discord, in
open quantum systems is of primary interest because of the possibility to
exploit these correlations for quantum information tasks. Here we review some
of the most recent results on the dynamics of correlations in bipartite systems
embedded in non-Markovian environments that, with their memory effects,
influence in a relevant way the system dynamics and appear to be more
fundamental than the Markovian ones for practical purposes. Firstly, we review
the phenomenon of entanglement revivals in a two-qubit system for both
independent environments and a common environment. We then consider the
dynamics of quantum discord in non-Markovian dephasing channel and briefly
discuss the occurrence of revivals of quantum correlations in classical
environments.Comment: 20 pages, 4 figures. Review article, in press in Int. J. Mod. Phys.
B, special issue "Classical Vs Quantum correlations in composite systems",
edited by L. Amico, S. Bose, V. Korepin and V. Vedra
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