Spectral controllability for 2D and 3D linear Schrödinger equations (Q1028316): Difference between revisions
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English | Spectral controllability for 2D and 3D linear Schrödinger equations |
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Spectral controllability for 2D and 3D linear Schrödinger equations (English)
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30 June 2009
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One considers a quantum particle in an infinite square potential well of the Euclidean space \(\mathbb R^n\), for \(n = 2, 3\), subjected to a control which is a uniform (in space) electric field. Under the dipolar moment approximation, the wave function solves a PDE of Schrödinger type. One studies the spectral controllability in finite time of the linearized system around the ground state. The following Kalman condition for spectral controllability in finite time is established: (Kal) if \(\Omega \) is the bottom of the well, then for every eigenvalue \(\lambda \) of \(-\Delta^D_{\Omega}\), the projections of the dipolar moment onto every (normalized) eigenvector associated to \(\lambda \) are linearly independent in \(\mathbb R^n\). In three dimensions, the main result states that spectral controllability in finite time never holds for one-directional dipolar moment. The proof uses classical results from trigonometric moment theory and properties about the set of zeros of entire functions. In two dimensions, one proves the existence of a minimal time \(T_{\min}(\Omega )>0\) for spectral controllability, i.e., if \(T>T_{\min}(\Omega )\), one has spectral controllability in time \(T\) if condition \((Kal)\) holds true for \((\Omega )\) and, if \(T<T_{\min}(\Omega )\) and the dipolar moment is one-directional, then one does not have spectral controllability in time \(T\). A necessary and sufficient condition on the dipolar moment insuring that spectral controllability in time \(T>T_{\min}(\Omega )\) holds generically with respect to the domain are given. The proof relies on shape differentiation and a careful study of Dirichlet-to-Neumann operators associated to certain Helmholtz equations. It is also shown that one can recover exact controllability in abstract spaces from this 2D spectral controllability, by adapting a classical variational argument from control theory.
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Schrödinger equation
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spectral controllability
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minimality of trigonometric families
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generic controllability
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shape differentiation
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Helmholtz equation
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layer potentials
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Dirichlet-to-Neumann
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Kalman condition
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