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Stochastic Hopf bifurcations in vacuum optical tweezers

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    SYSNO ASEP0547258
    Document TypeJ - Journal Article
    R&D Document TypeJournal Article
    Subsidiary JČlánek ve WOS
    TitleStochastic Hopf bifurcations in vacuum optical tweezers
    Author(s) Simpson, Stephen Hugh (UPT-D) RID, SAI
    Arita, Y. (GB)
    Dholakia, K. (GB)
    Zemánek, Pavel (UPT-D) RID, SAI, ORCID
    Number of authors4
    Article number043518
    Source TitlePhysical Review A. - : American Physical Society - ISSN 2469-9926
    Roč. 104, č. 4 (2021)
    Number of pages13 s.
    Publication formPrint - P
    Languageeng - English
    CountryUS - United States
    Keywordsoptical trap ; vacuum ; bifurcations ; limit cycles
    Subject RIVBH - Optics, Masers, Lasers
    OECD categoryOptics (including laser optics and quantum optics)
    R&D ProjectsGA19-17765S GA ČR - Czech Science Foundation (CSF)
    EF15_003/0000476 GA MŠMT - Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports (MEYS)
    Method of publishingLimited access
    Institutional supportUPT-D - RVO:68081731
    UT WOS000707419400004
    EID SCOPUS85117931313
    DOI10.1103/PhysRevA.104.043518
    AnnotationThe forces acting on an isotropic microsphere in optical tweezers are effectively conservative. However, reductions in the symmetry of the particle or trapping field can break this condition. Here we theoretically analyze the motion of a particle in a linearly nonconservative optical vacuum trap, concentrating on the case where symmetry is broken by optical birefringence, causing nonconservative coupling between rotational and translational degrees of freedom. Neglecting thermal fluctuations, we first show that the underlying deterministic motion can exhibit a Hopf bifurcation in which the trapping point destabilizes and limit cycles emerge whose amplitude grows with decreasing viscosity. When fluctuations are included, the bifurcation of the underlying deterministic system is expressed as a transition in the statistical description of the motion. For high viscosities, the probability distribution is normal, with a kurtosis of three, and persistent probability currents swirl around the stable trapping point. As the bifurcation is approached, the distribution and currents spread out in phase space. Following the bifurcation, the probability distribution function hollows out, reflecting the underlying limit cycle, and the kurtosis halves abruptly. The system is seen to be a noisy self-sustained oscillator featuring a highly uneven limit cycle. A variety of applications, from autonomous stochastic resonance to synchronization, is discussed.
    WorkplaceInstitute of Scientific Instruments
    ContactMartina Šillerová, sillerova@ISIBrno.Cz, Tel.: 541 514 178
    Year of Publishing2022
    Electronic addresshttps://journals.aps.org/pra/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevA.104.043518
Number of the records: 1  

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