Error correction model

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The pot lid is rotating around an axis along the surface of the table that is quickly rotating. This results in a secondary rotation which is perpendicular to the table.

This is equivalent to the Bloch-Siegert shift and can be seen by watching the motion of the red dot.

The Bloch-Siegert shift is a phenomenon in quantum physics that becomes important for driven two-level systems when the driving gets strong (e.g. atoms driven by a strong laser drive or nuclear spins in NMR, driven by a strong oscillating magnetic field).

When the rotating wave approximation(RWA) is invoked, the resonance between the driving field and a pseudospin occurs when the field frequency ω is identical to the spin's transition frequency ω0. The RWA is, however, an approximation. In 1940 Bloch and Siegert showed that the dropped parts oscillating rapidly can give rise to a shift in the true resonance frequency of the dipoles.

Rotating wave approximation

In RWA, when the perturbation to the two level system is Hab=Vab2cos(ωt), a linearly polarized field is considered as a superposition of two circularly polarized fields of the same amplitude rotating in opposite directions with frequencies ω,ω. Then, in the rotating frame(ω), we can neglect the counter-rotating field and the Rabi frequency is

Ω=12(|Vab/|)2+(ωω0)2.

Bloch-Siegert shift

Consider the effect due to the counter-rotating field. In the counter-rotating frame(ω), the effective precession frequency is

Ωeff=12(|Vab/|)2+(ω+ω0)2.

Then the resonance frequency is given by

2ω=(|Vab/|)2+(ω+ω0)2

and there are two solutions

ω=ω0[1+14(Vabω0)2]

and

ω=13ω0[1+34(Vabω0)2].

The shift from the RWA of the first solution is dominant, and the correction to ω0 is known as the Bloch-Siegert shift:

δωBS=14(Vab)22ω0

References

  • J. J. Sakurai, Modern Quantum Mechanics, Revised Edition,1994.
  • David J. Griffiths, Introduction to Quantum Mechanics, Second Edition, 2004.
  • L. Allen and J. H. Eberly, Optical Resonance and Two-level Atoms, Dover Publications, 1987.