Giuseppe Celardo
Catholic University of the Sacred Heart
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Featured researches published by Giuseppe Celardo.
Physical Review B | 2009
Giuseppe Celardo; L. Kaplan
Using an energy-independent non-Hermitian Hamiltonian approach to open systems, we fully describe transport through a sequence of potential barriers as external barriers are varied. Analyzing the complex eigenvalues of the non-Hermitian Hamiltonian model, a transition to a superradiant regime is shown to occur. Transport properties undergo a strong change at the superradiance transition, where the transmission is maximized and a drastic change in the structure of resonances is demonstrated. Finally, we analyze the effect of the superradiance transition in the Anderson localized regime.
Physical Review Letters | 2011
Giuseppe Celardo; N. Auerbach; F. M. Izrailev; Vladimir Zelevinsky
We analyze the statistics of resonance widths in a many-body Fermi system with open decay channels. Depending on the strength of continuum coupling, such a system reveals growing deviations from the standard chi-square (Porter-Thomas) width distribution. The deviations emerge from the process of increasing interaction of intrinsic states through common decay channels; in the limit of perfect coupling this process leads to the superradiance phase transition. The width distribution depends also on the intrinsic dynamics (chaotic versus regular). The results presented here are important for understanding the recent experimental data concerning the width distribution for neutron resonances in nuclei.
Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2012
Giuseppe Celardo; Fausto Borgonovi; Marco Merkli; V. I. Tsifrinovich; Gennady P. Berman
We investigate the role of long-lasting quantum coherence in the efficiency of energy transport at room temperature in Fenna-Matthews-Olson photosynthetic complexes. The excitation energy transfer due to coupling of the light-harvesting complex to the reaction center (“sink”) is analyzed using an effective non-Hermitian Hamiltonian. We show that, as the coupling to the reaction center is varied, maximal efficiency in energy transport is achieved in the vicinity of the superradiance transition, characterized by a segregation of the imaginary parts of the eigenvalues of the effective non-Hermitian Hamiltonian. Our results demonstrate that the presence of the sink (which provides a quasi-continuum in the energy spectrum) is the dominant effect in the energy transfer which takes place even in the absence of a thermal bath. This approach allows one to study the effects of finite temperature and the effects of any coupling scheme to the reaction center. Moreover, taking into account a realistic electric dipole ...
Physical Review E | 2007
Giuseppe Celardo; F. M. Izrailev; Vladimir Zelevinsky; Gennady P. Berman
Statistical properties of cross sections are studied for an open system of interacting fermions. The description is based on the effective non-Hermitian Hamiltonian that accounts for the existence of open decay channels preserving the unitarity of the scattering matrix. The intrinsic interaction is modeled by the two-body random ensemble of variable strength. In particular, the crossover region from isolated to overlapping resonances accompanied by the effect of the width redistribution creating superradiant and trapped states is studied in detail. The important observables, such as average cross section, its fluctuations, autocorrelation functions of the cross section, and scattering matrix, are very sensitive to the coupling of the intrinsic states to the continuum around the crossover. A detailed comparison is made of our results with standard predictions of statistical theory of cross sections, such as the Hauser-Feshbach formula for the average cross section and Ericson theory of fluctuations and correlations of cross sections. Strong deviations are found in the crossover region, along with the dependence on intrinsic interactions and the degree of chaos inside the system.
Physical Review B | 2010
Giuseppe Celardo; A. M. Smith; S. Sorathia; Vladimir Zelevinsky; R. A. Sen’kov; L. Kaplan
Using an approach to open quantum systems based on the effective non-Hermitian Hamiltonian, we fully describe transport properties for a paradigmatic model of a coherent quantum transmitter: a finite sequence of square potential barriers. We consider the general case of asymmetric external barriers and variable coupling strength to the environment. We demonstrate that transport properties are very sensitive to the degree of opening of the system and determine the parameters for maximum transmission at any given degree of asymmetry. Analyzing the complex eigenvalues of the non-Hermitian Hamiltonian, we show a double transition to a super-radiant regime where the transport properties and the structure of resonances undergo a strong change. We extend our analysis to the presence of disorder and to higher dimensions.
Physical Review B | 2014
Giuseppe Celardo; Giulio Giuseppe Giusteri; Fausto Borgonovi
We analyze a 1-d ring structure composed of many two-level systems, in the limit where only one excitation is present. The two-level systems are coupled to a common environment, where the excitation can be lost, which induces super and subradiant behavior, an example of cooperative quantum coherent effect. We consider time-independent random fluctuations of the excitation energies. This static disorder, also called inhomogeneous broadening in literature, induces Anderson localization and is able to quench Superradiance. We identify two different regimes:
Physical Review E | 2013
Luca Ponzoni; Giuseppe Celardo; Fausto Borgonovi; L. Kaplan; Armin Kargol
i)
Physical Review E | 2012
S. Sorathia; F. M. Izrailev; Vladimir Zelevinsky; Giuseppe Celardo
weak opening, in which Superradiance is quenched at the same critical disorder at which the states of the closed system localize;
Journal of Statistical Physics | 2004
Fausto Borgonovi; Giuseppe Celardo; M. Maianti; E. Pedersoli
ii)
Physical Review B | 2012
A Ziletti; Fausto Borgonovi; Giuseppe Celardo; F. M. Izrailev; L. Kaplan; Vladimir Zelevinsky
strong opening, with a critical disorder strength proportional to both the system size and the degree of opening, displaying robustness of cooperativity to disorder. Relevance to photosynthetic complexes is discussed.