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Interplay of excitation transport and atomic motion in flexible Rydberg aggregatesLeonhardt, Karsten 24 November 2016 (has links) (PDF)
Strong resonant dipole-dipole interactions in flexible Rydberg aggregates enable the formation of excitons, many-body states which collectively share excitation between atoms. Exciting the most energetic exciton of a linear Rydberg chain whose outer two atoms on one end are closely spaced causes the initiation of an exciton pulse for which electronic excitation and diatomic proximity propagate directed through the chain. The emerging transport of excitation is largely adiabatic and is enabled by the interplay between atomic motion and dynamical variation of the exciton.
Here, we demonstrate the coherent splitting of such pulses into two modes, which induce strongly different atomic motion, leading to clear signatures of nonadiabatic effects in atomic density profiles. The mechanism exploits local nonadiabatic effects at a conical intersection, turning them from a decoherence source into an asset. The conical intersection is a consequence of the exciton pulses moving along a linear Rydberg chain and approaching an additional linear, perpendicularly aligned Rydberg chain. The intersection provides a sensitive knob controlling the propagation direction and coherence properties of exciton pulses.
We demonstrate that this scenario can be exploited as an exciton switch, controlling direction and coherence properties of the joint pulse on the second of the chains.
Initially, we demonstrate the pulse splitting on planar aggregates with atomic motion one-dimensionally constrained and employing isotropic interactions. Subsequently, we confirm the splitting mechanism for a fully realistic scenario in which all spatial restrictions are removed and the full anisotropy of the dipole-dipole interactions is taken into account. Our results enable the experimental observation of non-adiabatic electronic dynamics and entanglement transport with Rydberg atoms. The conical intersection crossings are clearly evident, both in atomic mean position information and excited state spectra of the Rydberg system. This suggests flexible Rydberg aggregates as a test-bench for quantum chemical effects in experiments on much inflated length scales. The fundamental ideas discussed here have general implications for excitons on a dynamic network.
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Zeit und Alleinheit : ein spekulativer Entwurf zur Vermittlung von Theologie und Physik im Anschluss an die Analyse von Zeit bei Carl Friedrich von Weizsäcker /Wand, Christoph. January 2007 (has links)
Zugl.: Münster (Westfalen), Universiẗat, Diss., 2007.
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Investigation of the emergence of thermodynamic behavior in closed quantum systems and its relation to standard stochastic descriptionsSchmidtke, Daniel 20 August 2018 (has links)
Our everyday experiences teach us that any imbalance like temperature gradients, non-uniform particle-densities etc. will approach some equilibrium state if not subjected to any external force. Phenomenological descriptions of these empirical findings reach back to the 19th century where Fourier and Fick presented descriptions of relaxation for macroscopic systems by stochastic approaches. However, one of the main goals of thermodynamics remained the derivation of these phenomenological description from basic microscopic principles. This task has gained much attraction since the foundation of quantum mechanics about 100 years ago. However, up to now no such conclusive derivation is presented. In this dissertation we will investigate whether closed quantum systems may show equilibration, and if so, to what extend such dynamics are in accordance with standard thermodynamic behavior as described by stochastic approaches. To this end we consider i.a. Markovian dynamics, Fokker-Planck and diffusion equations. Furthermore, we consider fluctuation theorems as given e.g. by the Jarzynski relation beyond strict Gibbsian initial states. After all we find indeed good agreement for selected quantum systems.
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Investigations of transport phenomena and dynamical relaxation in closed quantum systemsKhodja, Abdellah 17 March 2015 (has links)
The first part of the present Phd thesis is devoted to transport investigations in disordered quantum systems. We aim at quantitatively determining transport parameters like conductivity, mean
free path, etc., for simple models of spatially disordered and/or percolated quantum systems in the limit of
high temperatures and low fillings using linear response theory. We find the transport behavior for some models to be in accord with a Boltzmann equation, i.e., long mean free paths, exponentially decaying currents although there are no band-structures to start from, while this does not apply to other models even though they are also almost completely delocalized. The second part of the present PhD thesis addresses the issue of initial state independence (ISI) in closed quantum system. The relevance of the eigenstate thermalization hypothesis (ETH) for the emergence of ISI equilibration is to some extent addressed. To this end, we investigate the Heisenberg spin-ladder and check the validity of the ETH for the energy difference operator by examining the scaling behavior of the corresponding ETH-fluctuations, which we compute using an innovative numerical method based on typicality related arguments. While, the ETH turns out to hold for the generic non-integrable models and may therefore serve as the key mechanism for ISI for this cases, it does not hold for the integrable Heisenberg-chain. However, close analysis on the dynamic of substantially out-of-equilibrium initial states indicates the occurrence of ISI equillibration in the thermodynamic limit regardless of whether the ETH is violated. Thus, we introduce a new parameter $v$, which we propose as an alternative of the ETH to indicate ISI equillibration in cases, in which the ETH does not strictly apply.
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Aspects of Non-Equilibrium Behavior in Isolated Quantum SystemsHeveling, Robin 06 September 2022 (has links)
Based on the publications [P1–P6], the cumulative dissertation at hand addresses quite diverse
aspects of non-equilibrium behavior in isolated quantum systems. The works presented in
publications [P1, P2] concern the issue of finding generally valid upper bounds on equilibration
times, which ensure the eventual occurrence of equilibration in isolated quantum systems. Recently,
a particularly compelling bound for physically relevant observables has been proposed. Said
bound is examined analytically as well as numerically. It is found that the bound fails to give
meaningful results in a number of standard physical scenarios. Continuing, publication [P4]
examines a particular integral fluctuation theorem (IFT) for the total entropy production of a
small system coupled to a substantially larger but finite bath. While said IFT is known to hold
for canonical states, it is shown to be valid for microcanonical and even pure energy eigenstates
as well by invoking the physically natural conditions of “stiffness” and “smoothness” of transition
probabilities. The validity of the IFT and the existence of stiffness and smoothness are numerically
investigated for various lattice models. Furthermore, this dissertation puts emphasis on the issue
of the route to equilibrium, i.e., to explain the omnipresence of certain relaxation dynamics in
nature, while other, more exotic relaxation patterns are practically never observed, even though
they are a priori not disfavored by the microscopic laws of motion. Regarding this question, the
existence of stability in a larger class of dynamics consisting of exponentially damped oscillations
is corroborated in publication [P6]. In the same vein, existing theories on the ubiquity of certain
dynamics are numerically scrutinized in publication [P3]. Finally, in publication [P5], the recently
proposed “universal operator growth hypothesis”, which characterizes the complexity growth of
operators during unitary time evolution, is numerically probed for various spin-based systems in
the thermodynamic limit. The hypothesis is found to be valid within the limits of the numerical
approach.
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Interplay of excitation transport and atomic motion in flexible Rydberg aggregatesLeonhardt, Karsten 18 October 2016 (has links)
Strong resonant dipole-dipole interactions in flexible Rydberg aggregates enable the formation of excitons, many-body states which collectively share excitation between atoms. Exciting the most energetic exciton of a linear Rydberg chain whose outer two atoms on one end are closely spaced causes the initiation of an exciton pulse for which electronic excitation and diatomic proximity propagate directed through the chain. The emerging transport of excitation is largely adiabatic and is enabled by the interplay between atomic motion and dynamical variation of the exciton.
Here, we demonstrate the coherent splitting of such pulses into two modes, which induce strongly different atomic motion, leading to clear signatures of nonadiabatic effects in atomic density profiles. The mechanism exploits local nonadiabatic effects at a conical intersection, turning them from a decoherence source into an asset. The conical intersection is a consequence of the exciton pulses moving along a linear Rydberg chain and approaching an additional linear, perpendicularly aligned Rydberg chain. The intersection provides a sensitive knob controlling the propagation direction and coherence properties of exciton pulses.
We demonstrate that this scenario can be exploited as an exciton switch, controlling direction and coherence properties of the joint pulse on the second of the chains.
Initially, we demonstrate the pulse splitting on planar aggregates with atomic motion one-dimensionally constrained and employing isotropic interactions. Subsequently, we confirm the splitting mechanism for a fully realistic scenario in which all spatial restrictions are removed and the full anisotropy of the dipole-dipole interactions is taken into account. Our results enable the experimental observation of non-adiabatic electronic dynamics and entanglement transport with Rydberg atoms. The conical intersection crossings are clearly evident, both in atomic mean position information and excited state spectra of the Rydberg system. This suggests flexible Rydberg aggregates as a test-bench for quantum chemical effects in experiments on much inflated length scales. The fundamental ideas discussed here have general implications for excitons on a dynamic network.
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