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High-harmonic generation (HHG) is a nonlinear process in which a material sample is irradiated by intense laser pulses, causing the emission of high harmonics of incident light. HHG has historically been explained by theories employing a classical electromagnetic field, successfully capturing its spectral and temporal characteristics. However, recent research indicates that quantum-optical effects naturally exist or can be artificially induced in HHG, such as entanglement between emitted harmonics. Even though the fundamental equations of motion for quantum electrodynamics (QED) are well-known, a unifying framework for solving them to explore HHG is missing. So far, numerical solutions have employed a wide range of basis-sets, methods, and untested approximations. Based on methods originally developed for cavity polaritonics, here we formulate a numerically accurate QED model consisting of a single active electron and a single quantized photon mode. Our framework can, in principle, be extended to higher electronic dimensions and multiple photon modes to be employed in codes for realistic physical systems. We employ it as a model of an atom interacting with a photon mode and predict a characteristic minimum structure in the HHG yield vs phase-squeezing. We find that this phenomenon, which can be used for novel ultrafast quantum spectroscopies, is partially captured by a multitrajectory Ehrenfest dynamics approach, with the exact minima position sensitive to the level of theory. On the one hand, this motivates using multitrajectory approaches as an alternative for costly exact calculations. On the other hand, it suggests an inherent limitation of the multitrajectory formalism, indicating the presence of entanglement and true quantum effects (especially prominent for atomic and molecular resonances). Our work creates a roadmap for a universal formalism of QED-HHG that can be employed for benchmarking approximate theories, predicting novel phenomena for advancing quantum applications, and for the measurements of entanglement and entropy.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jctc.4c01206 | DOI Listing |
Phys Rev Lett
August 2025
Washington University, Physics Department, Saint Louis, Missouri 63130, USA.
Single electrons confined to a free neon surface and manipulated through the circuit quantum electrodynamics architecture is a promising novel quantum computing platform. Understanding the exact physical nature of the electron-on-neon (eNe) charge states is important for realizing this platform's potential for quantum technologies. We investigate how resonator trench depth and substrate surface properties influence the formation of eNe charge states and their coupling to microwave resonators.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev Lett
August 2025
City University of Hong Kong, Department of Physics, Kowloon, Hong Kong SAR 999077, China.
The ability to slow down light at the single-photon level has applications in quantum information processing and other quantum technologies. We demonstrate two methods, both using just a single artificial atom, enabling dynamic control over microwave light velocities in waveguide quantum electrodynamics (QED). Our methods are based on two distinct mechanisms harnessing the balance between radiative decay and nonradiative decoherence rates of a superconducting artificial atom in front of a mirror.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFACS Omega
September 2025
Laboratório de Modelagem Molecular Aplicada e Simulação (LaMMAS), Universidade Estadual de Goiás, Anápolis, GO 75001-970, Brazil.
In this work, we report a theoretical investigation of the third-order nonlinear optical properties of the metronidazolium-picrate salt. The effects of the crystal environment are accounted for by the Iterative Charge Embedding approach, and the electronic calculations are carried out at the DFT (CAM-B3LYP/6-311++G-(d,p)) level. Furthermore, we use the results to parametrize a cavity Quantum Electrodynamics model for a quantum memory based on the Off-Resonant Cascaded Absorption protocol.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Chem Theory Comput
August 2025
Department of Chemistry, University of North Carolina Charlotte, Charlotte, North Carolina 28223, United States.
The description of strongly correlated systems interacting with quantized cavity modes poses significant theoretical challenges due to the combinatorial scaling of the electronic and photonic degrees of freedom. Recent advances addressing this complexity include cavity quantum electrodynamics (QED) generalizations of complete active space configuration interaction and density matrix renormalization group methods. In this work, we introduce a QED extension of state-averaged complete active space self-consistent field theory, which incorporates cavity-induced correlations through a second-order orbital optimization framework with robust convergence properties.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
August 2025
Department of Mathematics, University of Narowal, Narowal, Punjab, Pakistan.
This study, analyzed the explicit solitary wave soliton for the stochastic resonance nonlinear Schrödinger equation under the Brownian motion. The Schrödinger equations are mostly used to describe how light moves via planar wave guides and nonlinear optical fibres. Analytical technique is applied to gained the various solitary waves and soliton solutions for the resonance nonlinear Schrödinger equation namely, generalized exponential rational function method.
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