1,417 research outputs found
Spin entanglement using coherent light and cavity-QED
A scheme for probabilistic entanglement generation between two distant single
electron doped quantum dots, each placed in a high-Q microcavity, by detecting
strong coherent light which has interacted dispersively with both subsystems
and experienced Faraday rotation due to the spin selective trion transitions is
discussed. In order to assess the applicability of the scheme for distant
entanglement generation between atomic qubits proposed by T.D. Ladd et al. [New
J. Phys. 8, 184 (2006)] to two distant quantum dots, one needs to understand
the limitations imposed by hyperfine interactions of the quantum dot spin with
the nuclear spins of the material and by non-identical quantum dots.
Feasibility is displayed by calculating the fidelity for Bell state generation
analytically within an approximate framework. The fidelity is evaluated for a
wide range of parameters and different pulse lengths, yielding a trade-off
between signal and decoherence, as well as a set of optimal parameters.
Strategies to overcome the effect of non-identical quantum dots on the fidelity
are examined and the timescales imposed by the nuclear spins are discussed,
showing that efficient entanglement generation is possible with distant quantum
dots. In this context, effects due to light hole transitions become important
and have to be included. The scheme is discussed for one- as well as for
two-sided cavities, where one must be careful with reflected light which
carries spin information. The validity of the approximate method is checked by
a more elaborate semiclassical simulation which includes trion formation.Comment: 17 pages, 13 figures, typos corrected, reference update
Quantum Computation with Quantum Dots and Terahertz Cavity Quantum Electrodynamics
A quantum computer is proposed in which information is stored in the two
lowest electronic states of doped quantum dots (QDs). Many QDs are located in a
microcavity. A pair of gates controls the energy levels in each QD. A
Controlled Not (CNOT) operation involving any pair of QDs can be effected by a
sequence of gate-voltage pulses which tune the QD energy levels into resonance
with frequencies of the cavity or a laser. The duration of a CNOT operation is
estimated to be much shorter than the time for an electron to decohere by
emitting an acoustic phonon.Comment: Revtex 6 pages, 3 postscript figures, minor typos correcte
Beam test results for the FiberGLAST instrument
The FiberGLAST scintillating fiber telescope is a large-area instrument concept for NASA\u27s GLAST program. The detector is designed for high-energy gamma-ray astronomy, and uses plastic scintillating fibers to combine a photon pair tracking telescope and a calorimeter into a single instrument. A small prototype detector has been tested with high energy photons at the Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility. We report on the result of this beam test, including scintillating fiber performance, photon track reconstruction, angular resolution, and detector efficiency
Estimation of GRB detection by FiberGLAST
FiberGLAST is one of several instrument concepts being developed for possible inclusion as the primary Gamma-ray Large Area Space Telescope (GLAST) instrument. The predicted FiberGLAST effective area is more than 12,000 cm2 for energies between 30 MeV and 300 GeV, with a field of view that is essentially flat from 0°–80°. The detector will achieve a sensitivity more than 10 times that of EGRET. We present results of simulations that illustrate the sensitivity of FiberGLAST for the detection of gamma-ray bursts
Development and testing of a fiber/multianode photomultiplier system for use on FiberGLAST
A scintillating fiber detector is currently being studied for the NASA Gamma-Ray Large Area Space Telescope (GLAST) mission. This detector utilizes modules composed of a thin converter sheet followed by an x, y plane of scintillating fibers to examine the shower of particles created by high energy gamma-rays interacting in the converter material. The detector is composed of a tracker with 90 such modular planes and a calorimeter with 36 planes. The two major component of this detector are the scintillating fibers and their associated photodetectors. Here we present current status of development and test result of both of these. The Hamamatsu R5900-00-M64 multianode photomultiplier tube (MAPMT) is the baseline readout device. A characterization of this device has been performed including noise, cross- talk, gain variation, vibration, and thermal/vacuum test. A prototype fiber/MAPMT system has been tested at the Center for Advanced Microstructures and Devices at Louisiana State University with a photon beam and preliminary results are presented
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