Oscillatory dissipative tunneling in an asymmetric double-well potential
Dissipative tunneling remains a cornerstone effect in quantum mechanics. In chemistry, it plays a crucial role in governing the rates of chemical reactions, often modeled as the motion along the reaction coordinate from one potential well to another. The relative positions of energy levels in these...
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Zusammenfassung: | Dissipative tunneling remains a cornerstone effect in quantum mechanics. In
chemistry, it plays a crucial role in governing the rates of chemical
reactions, often modeled as the motion along the reaction coordinate from one
potential well to another. The relative positions of energy levels in these
wells strongly influence the reaction dynamics. Chemical research will benefit
from a fully adjustable, asymmetric double-well equipped with precise
measurement capabilities of the tunneling rates. In this paper, we show a
quantum simulator system that consists of a continuously driven Kerr parametric
oscillator with a third order non-linearity that can be operated in the quantum
regime to create a fully tunable asymmetric double-well. Our experiment
leverages a low-noise, all-microwave control system with a high-efficiency
readout, based on a tunnel Josephson junction circuit, of the which-well
information. We explore the reaction rates across the landscape of tunneling
resonances in parameter space. We uncover two new and counter-intuitive
effects: (i) a weak asymmetry can significantly decrease the activation rates,
even though the well in which the system is initialized is made shallower, and
(ii) the width of the tunneling resonances alternates between narrow and broad
lines as a function of the well depth and asymmetry. We predict by numerical
simulations that both effects will also manifest themselves in ordinary
chemical double-well systems in the quantum regime. Our work is a first step
for the development of analog molecule simulators of proton transfer reactions
based on quantum superconducting circuits. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2409.13113 |