Publications by authors named "Ranfagni A"

With a levitodynamics experiment in the strong and coherent quantum optomechanical coupling regime, we demonstrate that the oscillator acts as a broadband quantum spectrum analyzer. The asymmetry between positive and negative frequency branches in the displacement spectrum traces out the spectral features of the quantum fluctuations in the cavity field, which are thus explored over a wide spectral range. Moreover, in our two-dimensional mechanical system the quantum backaction, generated by such vacuum fluctuations, is strongly suppressed in a narrow spectral region due to a destructive interference in the overall susceptibility.

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The problem of evaluating dissipative effects in Josephson junctions loaded by transmission lines is reexamined, for either the symmetric or the asymmetric case, with particular consideration of the time domain in which the interaction between junction and load system occurs.

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The effect of dissipation when due to the load of a transmission line coupled to a Josephson junction is reconsidered and evaluated by means of a simple direct procedure that supplies analytical expressions. The results are in good agreement with the ones previously reported in the literature. A simple criterion for testing experimental results is introduced.

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A new type of cutoff attenuator is presented. The attenuator works in the X-band in conditions of almost perfect matching. This means that the phase of the wave, which propagates inside the guide, does not suffer sensible variation in the passage between X- and K(u)-bands.

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Tunneling processes in frustrated total internal reflection are reexamined in order to compare the results already obtained from adopting a procedure based on a transition-element analysis with those recently reported on the basis of a statistical method applied to a Brownian-like motion. A close agreement between the two approaches can be established, at optical and microwave scales, when suitable values of the involved parameters are adopted.

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A model based on a statistical method, as deduced from a path-integral treatment of the Brownian motion proposed by Feynman and Hibbs in 1965, demonstrates to be capable of interpreting the results of delay time measurements in frustrated total internal reflection experiments at an optical and microwave scale. A plausible description of the trajectories followed by the system inside the tunneling region, the air gap between the two dielectric prisms, is given.

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Delay time results obtained in microwave experiments at frequencies above and below the cutoff frequency of different waveguide sections are interpreted on the basis of wave propagation in the presence of dissipative effects. Kac's original suggestion was the starting point for the formulation of a stochastic model, which has now been substantially improved, also in relation to the transition-elements theory of Feynman-Hibbs. In this way, an approach to the problem is provided, which is completely distinct from the ones formulated elsewhere.

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Based on a close analogy with an RLC circuit, a model for interpreting delay times in forbidden regimes (tunneling) is formulated, avoiding the analytical continuation into imaginary time. In this way, a reasonable description of experimental data, which were previously reported for a waveguide propagation below the cutoff frequency at approximately 9.5 GHz, is obtained.

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Unexpected behavior of crossing microwave beams.

Phys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys

February 2004

An anomalous effect in the near field of crossed microwave beams, consisting in an unexpected transfer of modulation from one beam to the other, cannot be fully interpreted, at least not in a simple way, in terms of the usual electromagnetic or related framework. It is hypothesized that a local breaking of the Lorentz invariance, already invoked for an alternative interpretation of superluminal behaviors in these kinds of systems, could provide a partial explanation of the present results, although other interpretations cannot be completely ruled out.

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The case of a Josephson junction loaded by a transmission line is reexamined, according to the Green's function method, in order to compare the results with those that we previously obtained, analytically and numerically, following a different procedure.

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An alternative model for near-field propagation and optical tunneling is proposed following the lines of the path-integral method developed by Feynman, and in particular by using a transition-elements analysis. Such a model was able to account for the frequency dependency of delay-time results of an experiment involving microwave propagation in the near field using two horn antennas [A. Ranfagni et al.

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An experiment involving microwave propagation in the near-field region with two horn antennas demonstrated a superluminal behavior which is strongly dependent on the frequency. The models previously proposed are found to be inadequate for interpreting the results. An attempt is made within the framework of a stochastic model, which can be improved by a path-integral analysis.

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The problem of evaluating dissipative effects in macroscopic quantum tunneling is re-examined for the case of Josephson junctions, with the adoption of an alternative way with respect to several previously proposed and, in some cases, contradictory approaches. The system, which consists of a junction coupled to a transmission line, is analyzed both analytically and numerically. A test of the theoretical model, as compared to the experimental results available, is performed in accordance with a criterion based on a shortening of the traversal time.

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Simple stochastic model for optical tunneling.

Phys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys

March 2002

A simple model, derived from a Brownian-motion scheme, is capable of interpreting the results of delay-time measurements relative to frustrated total reflection experiments at the microwave scale but also in the visible region. In this framework we also obtain a plausible description of the trajectories (rays) inside the tunneling region, the air gap between two paraffin prisms.

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A model for tunneling based on stochastic processes proves to be capable of interpreting the results of two experiments at the microwave scale. The first of these consisted of measuring the penetration time in a subcutoff waveguide; the second one, in measuring the shift of a beam in a frustrated total reflection. Said shift which is a measurement of the traversal time of the barrier.

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The possibility of observing superluminal behavior in the propagation of localized microwaves over distances of tens of wavelengths is experimentally demonstrated. These types of waves, better than the evanescent modes of tunneling, can contribute to answering the question on the luminal limit of the signal velocity.

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An amplified spontaneous emission technique is described for the evaluation of optical gain as a function of the length of the pumped pencil-shaped area of the active medium. Continuous measurements of emission intensity are made while a movable screen varies the pumped length. Inhomogeneities of the pumping beam can be taken into account by employing two different pump intensities in alternate sequence.

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