3,174 research outputs found
Study of the excited charm and charm-strange mesons
We give a systematical study on the recently reported excited charm and
charm-strange mesons with potential spin-parity, including the
, , , ,
and . The main strong decay properties are
obtained by the framework of Bethe-Salpeter (BS) methods. Our results reveal
that the two charm-strange mesons can be well described by the further
- mixing scheme with a mixing angle of
degrees. The predicted decay ratio
for is .~ can also be
explained as the predominant state with a mixing angle of
degrees. Considering the mass range, and
are more likely to be the predominant states,
although the total widths under both the and assignments
have no great conflict with the current experimental data. The calculated width
for LHCb seems about 100 \si{MeV} larger than experimental
measurement if taking it as or dominant state .
The comparisons with other calculations and several important decay ratios are
also present. For the identification of these charm mesons, further
experimental information, such as
are necessary.Comment: 18 pages, 3 figure
Strong Decays of the Orbitally Excited Scalar Mesons
We calculate the two-body strong decays of the orbitally excited scalar
mesons and by using the relativistic Bethe-Salpeter
(BS) method. was observed recently by the LHCb Collaboration, the
quantum number of which has not been determined yet. In this paper, we assume
that it is the state and obtain the transition amplitude by using the
PCAC relation, low-energy theorem and effective Lagrangian method. For the
state, the total widths of and are 226 MeV
and 246 MeV, respectively. With the assumption of state, the widths
of and are both about 131 MeV, which is close
to the present experimental data. Therefore, is a strong
candidate for the state.Comment: 21 pages, 10 figure
Remote blind state preparation with weak coherent pulses in the field
Quantum computing has seen tremendous progress in the past years. Due to the
implementation complexity and cost, the future path of quantum computation is
strongly believed to delegate computational tasks to powerful quantum servers
on cloud. Universal blind quantum computing (UBQC) provides the protocol for
the secure delegation of arbitrary quantum computations, and it has received
significant attention. However, a great challenge in UBQC is how to transmit
quantum state over long distance securely and reliably. Here, we solve this
challenge by proposing and demonstrating a resource-efficient remote blind
qubit preparation (RBQP) protocol with weak coherent pulses for the client to
produce, using a compact and low-cost laser. We demonstrate the protocol in
field, experimentally verifying the protocol over 100-km fiber. Our experiment
uses a quantum teleportation setup in telecom wavelength and generates
secure qubits with an average fidelity of , which exceeds the
quantum no-cloning fidelity of equatorial qubit states. The results prove the
feasibility of UBQC over long distances, and thus serving as a key milestone
towards secure cloud quantum computing.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figure
Measurement-device-independent quantum key distribution over untrustful metropolitan network
Quantum cryptography holds the promise to establish an
information-theoretically secure global network. All field tests of
metropolitan-scale quantum networks to date are based on trusted relays. The
security critically relies on the accountability of the trusted relays, which
will break down if the relay is dishonest or compromised. Here, we construct a
measurement-device-independent quantum key distribution (MDIQKD) network in a
star topology over a 200 square kilometers metropolitan area, which is secure
against untrustful relays and against all detection attacks. In the field test,
our system continuously runs through one week with a secure key rate ten times
larger than previous result. Our results demonstrate that the MDIQKD network,
combining the best of both worlds --- security and practicality, constitutes an
appealing solution to secure metropolitan communications.Comment: 17 pages, 4 figure
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