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How to Make Distinct Dynamical Systems Appear Spectrally Identical

We show that a laser pulse can always be found that induces a desired optical response from an arbitrary dynamical system. As illustrations, driving fields are computed to induce the same optical response from a variety of distinct systems (open and closed, quantum and classical). As a result, the o...

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Published in:Physical review letters 2017-02, Vol.118 (8), p.083201-083201, Article 083201
Main Authors: Campos, Andre G, Bondar, Denys I, Cabrera, Renan, Rabitz, Herschel A
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cited_by cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-c419t-4edf8b3622f2bf1aa5e0e80ff07b44b13ed3e47e339d60d1a2934b4ac9705e673
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description We show that a laser pulse can always be found that induces a desired optical response from an arbitrary dynamical system. As illustrations, driving fields are computed to induce the same optical response from a variety of distinct systems (open and closed, quantum and classical). As a result, the observed induced dipolar spectra without detailed information on the driving field are not sufficient to characterize atomic and molecular systems. The formulation may also be applied to design materials with specified optical characteristics. These findings reveal unexplored flexibilities of nonlinear optics.
doi_str_mv 10.1103/PhysRevLett.118.083201
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source American Physical Society:Jisc Collections:APS Read and Publish 2023-2025 (reading list)
subjects Design engineering
Dynamical systems
Flexibility
Lasers
Nonlinear dynamics
Nonlinear optics
Optical properties
Spectra
title How to Make Distinct Dynamical Systems Appear Spectrally Identical
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