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The Jaynes-Cummings model and its descendants : modern research directions / Jonas Larson and Themistoklis Mavrogordatos.

By: Larson, Jonas [author.].
Contributor(s): Mavrogordatos, Themistoklis [author.] | Institute of Physics (Great Britain) [publisher.].
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookSeries: IOP (Series)Release 21: ; IOP series in quantum technology: ; IOP ebooks2021 collection: Publisher: Bristol [England] (Temple Circus, Temple Way, Bristol BS1 6HG, UK) : IOP Publishing, [2021]Description: 1 online resource (various pagings) : illustrations (some color).Content type: text Media type: electronic Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9780750334471; 9780750334464.Subject(s): Quantum theory | Quantum optics | Quantum physics (quantum mechanics & quantum field theory) | Quantum scienceAdditional physical formats: Print version:: No titleDDC classification: 530.12 Online resources: Click here to access online Also available in print.
Contents:
1. Theoretical aspects -- 1.1. The Jaynes-Cummings model -- 1.2. Jaynes-Cummings dynamics -- 1.3. Driven and open Jaynes-Cummings physics -- 1.4. Beyond the rotating wave approximation : the quantum Rabi model -- 1.5. Extended Jaynes-Cummings models -- 1.6. Extended Jaynes-Cummings models turned into single particle lattice problems -- 1.7. Review of the approximations underlying the JC model
2. Cavity QED -- 2.1. Early results and predictions -- 2.2. Cavity-induced atomic forces -- 2.3. State preparation -- 2.4. State tomography -- 2.5. Quantum information processing -- 2.6. Quantum fluctuations and coherence in the weak-excitation limit
3. Circuit QED -- 3.1. From the Cooper pair box to the transmon qubit : the generalized Jaynes-Cummings model -- 3.2. Engineering the coupling strength -- 3.3. Mitigating dispersion and decoherence -- 3.4. The (generalized) JC nonlinearity and spectrum revisited in the light of circuit QED -- 3.5. Control and transfer of quantum information in circuit QED
4. Trapped ions -- 4.1. Model Hamiltonians -- 4.2. State preparation and tomography -- 4.3. Quantum information processing -- 4.4. Further aspects and perspectives
5. Waveguide QED -- 5.1. Atomic emission in the vicinity of an interface -- 5.2. Circuit QED revisited -- 5.3. Light-matter interaction in a 1D waveguide : a continuum for correlated photon states -- 5.4. Interaction with matter in nanowire plasmons
6. Alternative physical systems -- 6.1. Nitrogen vacancy centers -- 6.2. Strong coupling in photonic crystals -- 6.3. Hybrid systems : from nanomechanics to atomic ensembles
7. Extensions to many-body configurations and additional degrees of freedom -- 7.1. Jaynes-Cummings-Hubbard models -- 7.2. Many-body cavity QED -- 7.3. Polaritonic chemistry.
Abstract: The Jaynes-Cummings Model (JCM) has recently been receiving increased attention as one of the simplest, yet intricately nonlinear, models of quantum physics. Emphasising the omnipresence of the JCM across a range of disciplines, this comprehensive review conveys to the reader the fundamental generality of its formalism, looking at a wide range of applications in specific physical systems and across disciplines including atomic physics, quantum optics, solid-state physics and quantum information sciences.
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"Version: 202112"--Title page verso.

Includes bibliographical references and index.

1. Theoretical aspects -- 1.1. The Jaynes-Cummings model -- 1.2. Jaynes-Cummings dynamics -- 1.3. Driven and open Jaynes-Cummings physics -- 1.4. Beyond the rotating wave approximation : the quantum Rabi model -- 1.5. Extended Jaynes-Cummings models -- 1.6. Extended Jaynes-Cummings models turned into single particle lattice problems -- 1.7. Review of the approximations underlying the JC model

2. Cavity QED -- 2.1. Early results and predictions -- 2.2. Cavity-induced atomic forces -- 2.3. State preparation -- 2.4. State tomography -- 2.5. Quantum information processing -- 2.6. Quantum fluctuations and coherence in the weak-excitation limit

3. Circuit QED -- 3.1. From the Cooper pair box to the transmon qubit : the generalized Jaynes-Cummings model -- 3.2. Engineering the coupling strength -- 3.3. Mitigating dispersion and decoherence -- 3.4. The (generalized) JC nonlinearity and spectrum revisited in the light of circuit QED -- 3.5. Control and transfer of quantum information in circuit QED

4. Trapped ions -- 4.1. Model Hamiltonians -- 4.2. State preparation and tomography -- 4.3. Quantum information processing -- 4.4. Further aspects and perspectives

5. Waveguide QED -- 5.1. Atomic emission in the vicinity of an interface -- 5.2. Circuit QED revisited -- 5.3. Light-matter interaction in a 1D waveguide : a continuum for correlated photon states -- 5.4. Interaction with matter in nanowire plasmons

6. Alternative physical systems -- 6.1. Nitrogen vacancy centers -- 6.2. Strong coupling in photonic crystals -- 6.3. Hybrid systems : from nanomechanics to atomic ensembles

7. Extensions to many-body configurations and additional degrees of freedom -- 7.1. Jaynes-Cummings-Hubbard models -- 7.2. Many-body cavity QED -- 7.3. Polaritonic chemistry.

The Jaynes-Cummings Model (JCM) has recently been receiving increased attention as one of the simplest, yet intricately nonlinear, models of quantum physics. Emphasising the omnipresence of the JCM across a range of disciplines, this comprehensive review conveys to the reader the fundamental generality of its formalism, looking at a wide range of applications in specific physical systems and across disciplines including atomic physics, quantum optics, solid-state physics and quantum information sciences.

Researchers in quantum physics, and in particular quantum optics. It should be a most valuable information source for anyone interested in cavity QED, circuit QED, or trapped ion physics.

Also available in print.

Mode of access: World Wide Web.

System requirements: Adobe Acrobat Reader, EPUB reader, or Kindle reader.

Jonas Larson is an Associated Professor in the Section of Quantum Optics and Matter at Stockholm University. Today he pursues research in various topics of quantum optics, such as cavity/circuit QED, cold atomic gases, open quantum systems, and quantum critical models. Themistoklis Mavrogordatos received the BS and MS degrees in electrical engineering and computer science from the National Technical University of Athens, Greece, in 2009, and the PhD degree in emission properties of dye-doped liquid crystal resonators from the University of Cambridge, UK, in 2014. He is presently a PDRA with Jonas Larson at Stockholm University.

Title from PDF title page (viewed on January 18, 2022).

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