heisenberg equations of motion
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2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Sh. Saedi ◽  
F. Kheirandish

AbstractFor a prototype quadratic Hamiltonian describing a driven, dissipative system, exact matrix elements of the reduced density matrix are obtained from a generating function in terms of the normal characteristic functions. The approach is based on the Heisenberg equations of motion and operator calculus. The special and limiting cases are discussed.


2021 ◽  
Vol 3 (3) ◽  
pp. 425-434
Author(s):  
Jonathan Friedman ◽  
Lev Mourokh ◽  
Michele Vittadello

We propose a physical mechanism of conformation-induced proton pumping in mitochondrial Complex I. The structural conformations of this protein are modeled as the motion of a piston having positive charges on both sides. A negatively charged electron attracts the piston, moving the other end away from the proton site, thereby reducing its energy and allowing a proton to populate the site. When the electron escapes, elastic forces assist the return of the piston, increasing proton site energy and facilitating proton transfer. We derive the Heisenberg equations of motion for electron and proton operators and rewrite them in the form of rate equations coupled to the phenomenological Langevin equation describing piston dynamics. This set of coupled equations is solved numerically. We show that proton pumping can be achieved within this model for a reasonable set of parameters. The dependencies of proton current on geometry, temperature, and other parameters are examined.


Author(s):  
Mohd Syafiq M. Hanapi ◽  
Abdel-Baset M. A. Ibrahim ◽  
Rafael Julius ◽  
Hichem Eleuch

The generation of squeezed states of light in a two-mode Kerr nonlinear directional coupler (NLDC) was investigated using two different methods in quantum mechanics. First, the analytical method, a Heisenberg-picture-based method where the operators are evolving in time but the state vectors are time-independent. In this method, an analytical solution to the coupled Heisenberg equations of motion for the propagating modes was proposed based on Baker–Hausdorff (BH) formula. Second, the phase space method, a Schrödinger-picture based method in which the operators are constant and the density matrix evolves in time. In this method, the quantum mechanical master equation of the density matrix was converted to a corresponding classical Fokker-Planck (FP) equation in positive-P representation. Then, the FP equation was converted to a set of stochastic differential equations using Ito rules. The strength and weaknesses of each method are discussed. A good agreement between both methods was achieved, especially at early evolution stages and lower values of linear coupling coefficient. On one side, the analytical method seems insensitive to higher values of nonlinear coupling coefficients. Nevertheless, it demonstrated better numerical stability. On the other side, the solution of the stochastic equations resulting from the phase space method is numerically expensive as it requires averaging over thousands of trajectories. Besides, numerically unstable trajectories appear with positive-P representation at higher values of nonlinearity.


Author(s):  
Duncan G. Steel

In the digital world, the concepts of on and off or high and low or 0 and 1 are common classical two-state systems. Quantum systems can be similarly configured, as we saw in Chapter 9 with the demonstration of Rabi oscillations. Two-state or few-state systems are so important that a powerful algebra has been developed to study and explore these systems. A similar algebra emerged from the algebra developed for spin ½ particles. While Chapter 10 discussed the spinors and spin matrices and the corresponding Pauli matrices, in this chapter the corresponding commutators are determined for the various atomic operators first introduced in Chapter 15. We then move to the Heisenberg picture including the operators for the vacuum field. The Heisenberg equations of motion are derived following the rules in Chapter 8 when a classical electromagnetic field is present and then in the presence of the quantum vacuum to include the effects of decay. This provides the first means of handling the return of an excited population back to the ground state which is very challenging to deal with in the amplitude picture. This chapter is enormously important because it sets the stage for much more advanced studies in advanced texts that determine the impact of fluctuations of the field and correlations measured from single photon emitters.


2019 ◽  
Vol 1 (2) ◽  
pp. 295-303
Author(s):  
Weng Cho Chew ◽  
Aiyin Y. Liu ◽  
Carlos Salazar-Lazaro ◽  
Dong-Yeop Na ◽  
Wei E. I. Sha

We show that the classical Hamilton equations of motion can be derived from the energy conservation condition. A similar argument is shown to carry to the quantum formulation of Hamiltonian dynamics. Hence, showing a striking similarity between the quantum formulation and the classical formulation. Furthermore, it is shown that the fundamental commutator can be derived from the Heisenberg equations of motion and the quantum Hamilton equations of motion. Also, that the Heisenberg equations of motion can be derived from the Schrödinger equation for the quantum state, which is the fundamental postulate. These results are shown to have important bearing for deriving the quantum Maxwell’s equations.


ISRN Optics ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 2014 ◽  
pp. 1-10
Author(s):  
Rajendra Pratap ◽  
D. K. Giri ◽  
Ajay Prasad

The nonclassical effects of light in the fifth harmonic generation are investigated by quantum mechanically up to the first-order Hamiltonian interaction. The coupled Heisenberg equations of motion involving real and imaginary parts of the quadrature operators are established. The occurrence of amplitude squeezing effects in both quadratures of the radiation field in the fundamental mode is investigated and found to be dependent on the selective phase values of the field amplitude. The photon statistics in the fundamental mode have also been investigated and found to be sub-Poissonian in nature. It is observed that there is no possibility to produce squeezed light in the harmonic mode up to first-order Hamiltonian interaction. Further, we have found that the normal squeezing in the harmonic mode directly depends upon the fifth power of the field amplitude of the initial pump field up to second-order Hamiltonian interaction. This gives a method of converting higher-order squeezing in the fundamental mode into normal squeezing in the harmonic mode and vice versa. The analytic expression of fifth-order squeezing of the fundamental mode in the fifth harmonic generation is established.


2011 ◽  
Vol 20 (05) ◽  
pp. 919-932 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. J. RIVERS

Inner products in quasi-Hermitian quantum theories, and hence probabilities, are defined through a metric that depends on the details of the Hamiltonians themselves. We shall see that the functional integral for quasi-Hermitian theories, and hence Feynman diagrams, for example, can be calculated without needing to evaluate the metric. The reason turns out be that their derivation is based fundamentally on the Heisenberg equations of motion and the canonical equal-time commutation relations, which retain their standard form. As an application, we show how co-ordinate transformations in the path integral can enable us to recover equivalent Hermitian Hamiltonians.


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