179 research outputs found
Reply to "Comment on 'Intrinsic decoherence in quantum mechanics'"
Finkelstein’s criticism [Phys. Rev. A (to be published)] of my paper [Phys. Rev. A 44, 5401 (1991)] presupposes time measurements of an accuracy explicitly ruled out in the paper
Weak force detection using a double Bose-Einstein condensate
A Bose-Einstein condensate may be used to make precise measurements of weak
forces, utilizing the macroscopic occupation of a single quantum state. We
present a scheme which uses a condensate in a double well potential to do this.
The required initial state of the condensate is discussed, and the limitations
on the sensitivity due to atom collisions and external coupling are analyzed.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figures, Eq.(41) has been correcte
Intracavity weak nonlinear phase shifts with single photon driving
We investigate a doubly resonant optical cavity containing a Kerr nonlinear
medium that couples two modes by a cross phase modulation. One of these modes
is driven by a single photon pulsed field, and the other mode is driven by a
coherent state. We find an intrinsic phase noise mechanism for the cross phase
shift on the coherent beam which can be attributed to the random emission times
of single photons from the cavity. An application to a weak nonlinearity phase
gate is discussed
Discrete teleportation protocol of continuum spectra field states
A discrete protocol for teleportation of superpositions of coherent states of
optical cavity fields is presented. Displacement and parity operators are
unconventionally used in Bell-like measurement for field states.Comment: 12 pages, 1 figur
Hamiltonian mappings and circle packing phase spaces
We introduce three area preserving maps with phase space structures which
resemble circle packings. Each mapping is derived from a kicked Hamiltonian
system with one of three different phase space geometries (planar, hyperbolic
or spherical) and exhibits an infinite number of coexisting stable periodic
orbits which appear to `pack' the phase space with circular resonances.Comment: 23 pages including 12 figures, REVTEX
Comments on discrete time in quantum mechanics
The possibility that time can be regarded as a discrete parameter is
re-examined. We study the dynamics of the free particle and find in some cases
superluminal propagation
Recommended from our members
Quantum computation with ``hot`` trapped ions
The authors describe two methods that have been proposed to circumvent the problem of heating by external electromagnetic fields in ion trap quantum computers. Firstly the higher order modes of ion oscillation (i.e., modes other than the center-of-mass mode) have much slower heating rates, and can therefore be employed as a reliable quantum information bus. Secondly they discuss a recently proposed method combining adiabatic passage and a number-state dependent phase shift which allows quantum gates to be performed using the center-of-mass mode as the information bus, regardless of its initial state
Non-deterministic Gates for Photonic Single Rail Quantum Logic
We discuss techniques for producing, manipulating and measureing qubits
encoded optically as vacuum and single photon states. We show that a universal
set of non-deterministic gates can be constructed using linear optics and
photon counting. We investigate the efficacy of a test gate given realistic
detector efficiencies.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figure
Comparison of LOQC C-sign gates with ancilla inefficiency and an improvement to functionality under these conditions
We compare three proposals for non-deterministic C-sign gates implemented
using linear optics and conditional measurements with non-ideal ancilla mode
production and detection. The simplified KLM gate [Ralph et al, Phys.Rev.A {\bf
65}, 012314 (2001)] appears to be the most resilient under these conditions. We
also find that the operation of this gate can be improved by adjusting the
beamsplitter ratios to compensate to some extent for the effects of the
imperfect ancilla.Comment: to appear in PR
Engineering dissipative channels for realizing Schrödinger cats in SQUIDs
We show that by engineering the interaction with the environment, there exists a large
class of systems that can evolve irreversibly to a cat state. To be precise, we show that it is possible to engineer an irreversible process so that the steady state is close to a pure Schrödinger’s cat state by using double well systems and an environment comprising two-photon (or phonon) absorbers.We also show that it should be possible to prolong the lifetime of a Schrödinger’s cat state exposed to the destructive effects of a conventional
single-photon decohering environment. In addition to our general analysis, we present a concrete circuit realization of both system and environment that should be fabricatable with current technologies. Our protocol should make it easier to prepare and maintain Schrödinger cat states, which would be useful in applications of quantum metrology and information processing as well as being of interest to those probing the quantum to classical transition
- …