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Quantum Trajectory Method in Quantum Optics

Quantum Trajectory Method in Quantum Optics. Tarek Ahmed Mokhiemer Graduate Student King Fahd University of Petroleum and Minerals. Outline. General overview QTM applied to a Two level atom interacting with a classical field A more formal approach to QTM QTM applied to micromaser

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Quantum Trajectory Method in Quantum Optics

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  1. Quantum Trajectory Method in Quantum Optics Tarek Ahmed Mokhiemer Graduate StudentKing Fahd University of Petroleum and Minerals

  2. Outline • General overview • QTM applied to a Two level atom interacting with a classical field • A more formal approach to QTM • QTM applied to micromaser • References

  3. The beginning… • J. Dalibard, Y. Castin and K. Mølmer, Phys. Rev. Lett. 68, 580 (1992) • R. Dum, A. S. Parkins, P. Zoller and C. W. Gardiner, Phys. Rev. A 46, 4382 (1992) • H. J. Carmichael, “An Open Systems Approach to Quantum Optics”, Lecture Notes in Physics (Springer, Berlin , 1993)

  4. Quantum Trajectory Method is a numerical Monte-Carlo analysis used to solve the master equation describing the interaction between a quantum system and a Markovian reservoir. Reservoir system

  5. 1 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0.05 0.1 0.15 0.2 Time A single quantum trajectory represents the evolution of the system wavefunction conditioned to a series of quantum jumps at random times

  6. 0.8 0.7 0.6 0.5 0.4 0.3 0.2 0.1 0 Time The evolution of the system density matrix is obtained by taking the average over many quantum trajectories. 2000 Trajectories

  7. The quantum trajectory method is equivalent to solving the master equation

  8. Advantages of QTM • Computationally efficient • Physically Insightful !

  9. A single quantum trajectory Initial state Non-Unitary Evolution Quantum Jump Non-Unitary Evolution Quantum Jump

  10. The Master Equation (Lindblad Form)

  11. Two level atom interacting with a classical field

  12. .

  13. Initial state: The probability of spontaneous emission of a photon at Δt is:

  14. Applying Weisskopf-Wigner approximations … ( Valid for small Δt) Г: spontaneous decay rate

  15. Deriving the conditional evolution Hamiltonian Hcond

  16. Two methods Integrate the Schrödinger's equation till the probability of decay equals a random number. Compare the probability of decay each time step with a random number

  17. Non-Hermetian Hamiltonian μ: Normalization Constant

  18. A single Quantum Trajectory time

  19. Average of 2000 Trajectories: 0.8 0.7 0.6 0.5 0.4 0.3 0.2 0.1 0 Time

  20. Spontaneous decay in the absence of the driving field time

  21. Is a single trajectory physically realistic or is it just a “clever mathematical trick”?

  22. A more formal approach…starting from the master equation

  23. Jump Superoperator: Applying the Dyson expansion

  24. Initialstate Non-Unitary Evolution Quantum Jump Non-Unitary Evolution Quantum Jump

  25. The more general case…

  26. Different Unravellings A single number state A superposition of number states

  27. The Micromaser “Single atoms interacting with a highly modified vacuum inside a superconducting resonator”

  28. Quantum Semiclass. Opt. 8, 73–104 (1996)

  29. Atom passing without emitting a photon Atom emits a photon while passing through the cavity The field acquires a photon from the thermal reservoir The field loses a photon to the thermal reservoir Jump superoperator

  30. Comparison between QTM and the analytical solution

  31. The power of the Quantum Trajectory Method time

  32. Transient Evolution of the Probability Distribution p(n) n

  33. Limitation of the method

  34. Conclusion • Quantum Trajectory Method can be used efficiently to simulate transient and steady state behavior of quantum systems interacting with a markovian reservoir. • They are most useful when no simple analytic solution exists or the dimensions of the density matrix are very large.

  35. References • A quantum trajectory analysis of the one-atom micromaser, J D Cressery and S M Pickles, Quantum Semiclass. Opt. 8, 73–104 (1996) • Wave-function approach to dissipative processes in quantum optics,Phys. Rev. Lett., 68, 580 (1992) • Quantum Trajectory Method in Quantum Optics, Young-Tak Chough • Measuring a single quantum trajectory, D Bouwmeester and G Nienhuis, Quantum Semiclass. Opt. 8 (1996) 277–282

  36. Questions…

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