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Quantum Chemistry
Pulsed Generation of Quantum Coherences and Non-classicality in Light-Matter Systems
arXiv
Authors: F. J. Gomez-Ruiz, O. L. Acevedo, F. J. Rodriguez, L. Quiroga, N. F. Johnson
Year
2017
Paper ID
45022
Status
Preprint
Abstract Read
~2 min
Abstract Words
132
Citations
N/A
Abstract
We show that a pulsed stimulus can be used to generate many-body quantum coherences in light-matter systems of general size. Specifically, we calculate the exact real-time evolution of a driven, generic out-of-equilibrium system comprising an arbitrary number N qubits coupled to a global boson field. A novel form of dynamically-driven quantum coherence emerges for general N and without having to access the empirically challenging strong-coupling regime. Its properties depend on the speed of the changes in the stimulus. Non-classicalities arise within each subsystem that have eluded previous analyses. Our findings show robustness to losses and noise, and have potential functional implications at the systems level for a variety of nanosystems, including collections of N atoms, molecules, spins, or superconducting qubits in cavities - and possibly even vibration-enhanced light harvesting processes in macromolecules.
Why This Paper Matters
- This paper contributes to the Quantum Chemistry research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
- It adds a 2017 reference point for readers tracking recent quantum research.
- We show that a pulsed stimulus can be used to generate many-body quantum coherences in light-matter systems of general size.
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