Conveners
M3-1 Nonlinear and Quantum Optics (DAMOPC) / Optique non linéaire et optique quantique (DPAMPC)
- Duncan O'Dell (McMaster University)
We propose a driving scheme in dynamic Atomic Force Microscopy (AFM) to maximize the time the tip spends near the surface during each oscillation cycle. Using a quantum description of the oscillator that employs a generalized Caldeira-Leggett model for dissipative oscillator-surface interaction, we predict large classical squeezing and a small amount of skewness of the probability distribution...
The quest to engineer quantum computers of a useful scope faces many challenges that will require continued investigation of the physics underlying the devices. In this talk, we focus on trapped ion quantum computing. We discuss our efforts to implement quantum information processing with Ba+ ions and provide an overview of possible future benefits this ion could provide for quantum computing...
We propose an efficient, nanoplasmonic method to selectively enhance the spontaneous emission rate of a quantum system by changing the polarization of an incident control field, and exploiting the polarization dependence of the system's spontaneous emission rate. This differs from the usual Purcell enhancement of spontaneous emission rates as it can be selectively turned on and off. Using a...
Time-resolved spectroscopy of multi-electron dynamics associated with the Xe giant plasmonic resonance is demonstrated by applying an attosecond in situ measurement method. The Xe giant resonance was first noticed through enhanced photoionization around 100 eV using synchrotron X-ray beams. Recently, this was revisited with high harmonic spectroscopy, where enhanced extreme ultraviolet (XUV)...
The study of many-body quantum systems undergoing non-equilibrium dynamics has received a lot of interest in the past few years. One way to characterize such systems is by monitoring non-analytic behavior of physical quantities that might occur as a function of time. This is precisely the aim of the theory of dynamical phase transitions. Another way is by looking at universal structures that...
High harmonic generation (HHG) in gasses has become a method of choice among table-top extreme ultraviolet (XUV) sources. In order to generate higher photon energies from this process, many strategies can be implemented, including red-shifting and compressing the driver pulses. Here, we propose a new approach for inducing a red-shift to driver pulses and compressing them to few-cycle durations...
Time-domain terahertz (THz) spectroscopy has been widely exploited in studying semiconductors, superconductors, topological insulators, and metal-organic frameworks. A high-sensitivity THz system can resolve weak spectroscopic features and a broadband system allows experimentalists to rely on additional spectral information to investigate novel phenomena in materials. In a standard...
In this research project, I calculated the high-harmonic spectrum from a 1D periodic potential. I investigated numerical methods for solving the 1D time-dependent Schrodinger equation of a particle in a double-well potential, as well as determining its ground state. I used the Crank Nicolson method [1], which is a finite difference method that can be used for numerically solving second-order...
High harmonics generation (HHG) in solids is a decade old field and yet the understood mechanisms leading to HHG is still an incomplete picture. They fail to capture real-space motion like lateral tunneling ionization. We investigate theoretically high harmonic generation in solids using a localized basis of Wannier states. Wannier states are localized wavefunctions overcoming the infinite...