168 research outputs found
Spin dynamics and structure formation in a spin-1 condensate in a magnetic field
We study the dynamics of a trapped spin-1 condensate in a magnetic field. First, we analyze the homogeneous system, for which the dynamics can be understood in terms of orbits in phase space. We analytically solve for the dynamical evolution of the populations of the various Zeeman components of the homogeneous system. This result is then applied via a local-density approximation to trapped quasi-one-dimensional condensates. Our analysis of the trapped system in a magnetic field shows that both the mean-field and Zeeman regimes are simultaneously realized, and we argue that the border between these two regions is where spin domains and phase defects are generated. We propose a method to experimentally tune the position of this border
Chiral bound states in the continuum
We present a distinct mechanism for the formation of bound states in the
continuum (BICs). In chiral quantum systems there appear zero-energy states in
which the wave function has finite amplitude only in one of the subsystems
defined by the chiral symmetry. When the system is coupled to leads with a
continuum energy band, part of these states remain bound. We derive some
algebraic rules for the number of these states depending on the dimensionality
and rank of the total Hamiltonian. We examine the transport properties of such
systems including the appearance of Fano resonances in some limiting cases.
Finally, we discuss experimental setups based on microwave dielectric
resonators and atoms in optical lattices where these predictions can be tested.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figures. v2: includes results specific to honeycomb
lattice; matches published versio
Collective modes of a trapped ion-dipole system
We study a simple model consisting of an atomic ion and a polar molecule
trapped in a single setup, taking into consideration their electrostatic
interaction. We determine analytically their collective modes of excitation as
a function of their masses, trapping frequencies, distance, and the molecule's
electric dipole moment. We then discuss the application of these collective
excitations to cool molecules, to entangle molecules and ions, and to realize
two-qubit gates between them. We finally present a numerical analysis of the
possibility of applying these tools to study magnetically ordered phases of
two-dimensional arrays of polar molecules, a setup proposed to quantum-simulate
some strongly-correlated models of condensed matter.Comment: v2: 13 pages, 8 figures (from 10 figure files). Matches published
version in Appl. Phys. B, special issue "Wolfgang Paul 100
Spin dynamics and structure formation in a spin-1 condensate in a magnetic field
7 págs.; 5 figs.; PACS number s : 03.75.Mn, 03.75.Kk, 71.15.MbWe study the dynamics of a trapped spin-1 condensate in a magnetic field. First, we analyze the homogeneous system, for which the dynamics can be understood in terms of orbits in phase space. We analytically solve for the dynamical evolution of the populations of the various Zeeman components of the homogeneous system. This result is then applied via a local-density approximation to trapped quasi-one-dimensional condensates. Our analysis of the trapped system in a magnetic field shows that both the mean-field and Zeeman regimes are simultaneously realized, and we argue that the border between these two regions is where spin domains and phase defects are generated. We propose a method to experimentally tune the position of this border. ©2009 The American Physical SocietyThis work was supported by the UK EPSRC Grant No. EP/E025935.Peer Reviewe
Phase Stabilization of a Frequency Comb using Multipulse Quantum Interferometry
From the interaction between a frequency comb and an atomic qubit, we derive
quantum protocols for the determination of the carrier-envelope offset phase,
using the qubit coherence as a reference, and without the need of frequency
doubling or an octave spanning comb. Compared with a trivial interference
protocol, the multipulse protocol results in a polynomial enhancement of the
sensitivity O(N^{-2}) with the number N of laser pulses involved. We present
specializations of the protocols using optical or hyperfine qubits,
Lambda-schemes and Raman transitions, and introduce methods where the reference
is another phase-stable cw-laser or frequency comb
Dynamical interferences to probe short-pulse photoassociation of Rb atoms and stabilization of Rb_2 dimers
We analyze the formation of Rb_2 molecules with short photoassociation pulses
applied to a cold Rb-85 sample. A pump laser pulse couples a continuum level of
the ground electronic state X ^1\Sigma_{g}^+ with bound levels in the 0_{u}^+
(5S+5P_{1/2}) and 0_{u}^+ (5S+5P_{3/2}) vibrational series. The nonadiabatic
coupling between the two excited channels induces time-dependent beatings in
the populations. We propose to take advantage of these oscillations to design
further laser pulses that probe the photoassociation process via
photoionization or that optimize the stabilization in deep levels of the ground
state.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures. v2: major changes in introduction, discussion
clarified. v3: minor corrections. v4: matches published versio
Measuring molecular electric dipoles using trapped atomic ions and ultrafast laser pulses
We study a hybrid quantum system composed of an ion and an electric dipole.
We show how a trapped ion can be used to measure the small electric field
generated by a classical dipole. We discuss the application of this scheme to
measure the electric dipole moment of cold polar molecules, whose internal
state can be controlled with ultrafast laser pulses, by trapping them in the
vicinity of a trapped ion.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figures. Substantially modified version, with 4 new
appendices; matches published versio
Anomalous spin-charge separation in a driven Hubbard system
Spin-charge separation (SCS) is a striking manifestation of strong
correlations in low-dimensional quantum systems, whereby a fermion splits into
separate spin and charge excitations that travel at different speeds. Here, we
demonstrate that periodic driving enables control over SCS in a Hubbard system
near half-filling. In one dimension, we predict analytically an exotic regime
where charge travels slower than spin and can even become 'frozen', in
agreement with numerical calculations. In two dimensions, the driving slows
both charge and spin, and leads to complex interferences between
single-particle and pair-hopping processes.Comment: arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:2002.0231
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