1,883 research outputs found
Multipartite entanglement in the Fenna-Matthews-Olson (FMO) pigment-protein complex
We investigate multipartite states in the Fenna-Matthews-Olson (FMO)
pigment-protein complex of the green sulfur bacteria using a Lorentzian
spectral density of the phonon reservoir fitted with typical parameter
estimates of the species, P. aestuarii. The evolution of the entanglement
measure of the excitonic W qubit states is evaluated in the picosecond time
range, showing increased revivals in the non-Markovian regime. Similar trends
are observed in the evolution dynamics of the Meyer-Wallach measure of the
N-exciton multipartite state, with results showing that multipartite
entanglement can last from 0.5 to 1 ps, between the Bchls of the FMO complex.
The teleportation and quantum information splitting fidelities associated with
the GHZ and W_A resource states of the excitonic qubit channels of the FMO
complex show that revivals in fidelities increase with the degree of
non-Markovian strength of the decoherent environment. Results indicate that
quantum information processing tasks involving teleportation followed by the
decodification process involving W_A states of the FMO complex, may play a
critical role during coherent oscillations at physiological temperatures.Comment: 16 pages, new figs, typo
Magnetism of the LTT phase of Eu doped La_{2-x}Sr_xCuO_4
The ESR signal of Gd spin probes (0.5 at %) as well as the static normal
state susceptibility of Eu (J(Eu^{3+})=0) doped La_{2-x-y}Sr_xEu_yCuO_4 reveal
pronounced changes of the Cu magnetism at the structural transition from the
orthorhombic to the low temperature tetragonal phase for all
non-superconducting compositions. Both a jumplike decrease of \chi as well as
the ESR data show an increase of the in-plane magnetic correlation length in
the LTT phase. From the Gd^{3+} ESR linewidth we find that for specific Eu and
Sr concentrations in the LTT phase the correlation length increases up to more
than 100 lattice constants and the fluctuation frequency of the CuO_2 spin
system slows down to 10^{10}- 10^{11}sec^{-1}. However, there is no static
order above T ~ 8K in contrast to the LTT phase of Nd doped La_{2-x}Sr_xCuO_4
with pinned stripe correlations.Comment: 7 pages, RevTex, 3 eps figures. To appear in the Proceedings of the
International Conference "Stripes, Lattice Instabilities and High Tc
Superconductivity", (Rome, Dec. 1996
Controlled spontaneous emission
The problem of spontaneous emission is studied by a direct computer
simulation of the dynamics of a combined system: atom + radiation field. The
parameters of the discrete finite model, including up to 20k field oscillators,
have been optimized by a comparison with the exact solution for the case when
the oscillators have equidistant frequencies and equal coupling constants.
Simulation of the effect of multi-pulse sequence of phase kicks and emission by
a pair of atoms shows that both the frequency and the linewidth of the emitted
spectrum could be controlled.Comment: 25 pages including 11 figure
Nonequilibrium Atom-Dielectric Forces Mediated by a Quantum Field
In this paper we give a first principles microphysics derivation of the
nonequilibrium forces between an atom, treated as a three dimensional harmonic
oscillator, and a bulk dielectric medium modeled as a continuous lattice of
oscillators coupled to a reservoir. We assume no direct interaction between the
atom and the medium but there exist mutual influences transmitted via a common
electromagnetic field. By employing concepts and techniques of open quantum
systems we introduce coarse-graining to the physical variables - the medium,
the quantum field and the atom's internal degrees of freedom, in that order -
to extract their averaged effects from the lowest tier progressively to the top
tier. The first tier of coarse-graining provides the averaged effect of the
medium upon the field, quantified by a complex permittivity (in the frequency
domain) describing the response of the dielectric to the field in addition to
its back action on the field through a stochastic forcing term. The last tier
of coarse- graining over the atom's internal degrees of freedom results in an
equation of motion for the atom's center of mass from which we can derive the
force on the atom. Our nonequilibrium formulation provides a fully dynamical
description of the atom's motion including back action effects from all other
relevant variables concerned. In the long-time limit we recover the known
results for the atom-dielectric force when the combined system is in
equilibrium or in a nonequilibrium stationary state.Comment: 24 pages, 2 figure
Sampling of quantum dynamics at long time
The principle of energy conservation leads to a generalized choice of
transition probability in a piecewise adiabatic representation of
quantum(-classical) dynamics. Significant improvement (almost an order of
magnitude, depending on the parameters of the calculation) over previous
schemes is achieved. Novel perspectives for theoretical calculations in
coherent many-body systems are opened.Comment: Revised versio
Gravitational Radiation from the radial infall of highly relativistic point particles into Kerr black holes
In this paper, we consider the gravitational radiation generated by the
collision of highly relativistic particles with rotating Kerr black holes. We
use the Sasaki-Nakamura formalism to compute the waveform, energy spectra and
total energy radiated during this process. We show that the gravitational
spectrum for high-energy collisions has definite characteristic universal
features, which are independent of the spin of the colliding objects. We also
discuss possible connections between these results and the black hole-black
hole collision at the speed of light process. With these results at hand, we
predict that during the high speed collision of a non-rotating hole with a
rotating one, about 35% of the total energy can get converted into
gravitational waves. Thus, if one is able to produce black holes at the Large
Hadron Collider, as much as 35% of the partons' energy should be emitted during
the so called balding phase. This energy will be missing, since we don't have
gravitational wave detectors able to measure such amplitudes. The collision at
the speed of light between one rotating black hole and a non-rotating one or
two rotating black holes turns out to be the most efficient gravitational wave
generator in the Universe.Comment: 15 pages, REVTEX4. Some comments and references adde
Robustness against parametric noise of non ideal holonomic gates
Holonomic gates for quantum computation are commonly considered to be robust
against certain kinds of parametric noise, the very motivation of this
robustness being the geometric character of the transformation achieved in the
adiabatic limit. On the other hand, the effects of decoherence are expected to
become more and more relevant when the adiabatic limit is approached. Starting
from the system described by Florio et al. [Phys. Rev. A 73, 022327 (2006)],
here we discuss the behavior of non ideal holonomic gates at finite operational
time, i.e., far before the adiabatic limit is reached. We have considered
several models of parametric noise and studied the robustness of finite time
gates. The obtained results suggest that the finite time gates present some
effects of cancellation of the perturbations introduced by the noise which
mimic the geometrical cancellation effect of standard holonomic gates.
Nevertheless, a careful analysis of the results leads to the conclusion that
these effects are related to a dynamical instead of geometrical feature.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figures, several changes made, accepted for publication on
Phys. Rev.
Phase Diffusion in Quantum Dissipative Systems
We study the dynamics of the quantum phase distribution associated with the
reduced density matrix of a system for a number of situations of practical
importance, as the system evolves under the influence of its environment,
interacting via a quantum nondemoliton type of coupling, such that there is
decoherence without dissipation, as well as when it interacts via a dissipative
interaction, resulting in decoherence as well as dissipation. The system is
taken to be either a two-level atom (or equivalently, a spin-1/2 system) or a
harmonic oscillator, and the environment is modeled as a bath of harmonic
oscillators, starting out in a squeezed thermal state. The impact of the
different environmental parameters on the dynamics of the quantum phase
distribution for the system starting out in various initial states, is
explicitly brought out. An interesting feature that emerges from our work is
that the relationship between squeezing and temperature effects depends on the
type of system-bath interaction. In the case of quantum nondemolition type of
interaction, squeezing and temperature work in tandem, producing a diffusive
effect on the phase distribution. In contrast, in case of a dissipative
interaction, the influence of temperature can be counteracted by squeezing,
which manifests as a resistence to randomization of phase. We make use of the
phase distributions to bring out a notion of complementarity in atomic systems.
We also study the dispersion of the phase using the phase distributions
conditioned on particular initial states of the system.Comment: Accepted for publication in Physical Review A; changes in section V;
20 pages, 12 figure
Energy-scales convergence for optimal and robust quantum transport in photosynthetic complexes
Underlying physical principles for the high efficiency of excitation energy
transfer in light-harvesting complexes are not fully understood. Notably, the
degree of robustness of these systems for transporting energy is not known
considering their realistic interactions with vibrational and radiative
environments within the surrounding solvent and scaffold proteins. In this
work, we employ an efficient technique to estimate energy transfer efficiency
of such complex excitonic systems. We observe that the dynamics of the
Fenna-Matthews-Olson (FMO) complex leads to optimal and robust energy transport
due to a convergence of energy scales among all important internal and external
parameters. In particular, we show that the FMO energy transfer efficiency is
optimum and stable with respect to the relevant parameters of environmental
interactions and Frenkel-exciton Hamiltonian including reorganization energy
, bath frequency cutoff , temperature , bath spatial
correlations, initial excitations, dissipation rate, trapping rate, disorders,
and dipole moments orientations. We identify the ratio of \lambda T/\gamma\*g
as a single key parameter governing quantum transport efficiency, where g is
the average excitonic energy gap.Comment: minor revisions, removing some figures, 19 pages, 19 figure
Hamiltonian Formulation of Quantum Error Correction and Correlated Noise: The Effects Of Syndrome Extraction in the Long Time Limit
We analyze the long time behavior of a quantum computer running a quantum
error correction (QEC) code in the presence of a correlated environment.
Starting from a Hamiltonian formulation of realistic noise models, and assuming
that QEC is indeed possible, we find formal expressions for the probability of
a faulty path and the residual decoherence encoded in the reduced density
matrix. Systems with non-zero gate times (``long gates'') are included in our
analysis by using an upper bound on the noise. In order to introduce the local
error probability for a qubit, we assume that propagation of signals through
the environment is slower than the QEC period (hypercube assumption). This
allows an explicit calculation in the case of a generalized spin-boson model
and a quantum frustration model. The key result is a dimensional criterion: If
the correlations decay sufficiently fast, the system evolves toward a
stochastic error model for which the threshold theorem of fault-tolerant
quantum computation has been proven. On the other hand, if the correlations
decay slowly, the traditional proof of this threshold theorem does not hold.
This dimensional criterion bears many similarities to criteria that occur in
the theory of quantum phase transitions.Comment: 19 pages, 5 figures. Includes response to arXiv:quant-ph/0702050. New
title and an additional exampl
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