42,311 research outputs found
Evaluation of heating effects on atoms trapped in an optical trap
We solve a stochastic master equation based on the theory of Savard et al. [T. A. Savard. K. M. O'Hara, and J. E. Thomas, Phys, Rev. A 56, R1095 (1997)] for heating arising from fluctuations in the trapping laser intensity. We compare with recent experiments of Ye et al. [J. Ye, D. W. Vernooy, and H. J. Kimble, Phys. Rev. Lett. 83, 4987 (1999)], and find good agreement with the experimental measurements of the distribution of trap occupancy times. The major cause of trap loss arises from the broadening of the energy distribution of the trapped atom, rather than the mean heating rate, which is a very much smaller effect
Quantum nonlocality of four-qubit entangled states
Quantum nonlocality of several four-qubit states is investigated by
constructing a new Bell inequality. These include the
Greenberger-Zeilinger-Horne (GHZ) state, W state, cluster state, and the state
that has been recently proposed in [PRL, {\bf 96}, 060502 (2006)]. The
Bell inequality is optimally violated by but not violated by the GHZ
state. The cluster state also violates the Bell inequality though not
optimally. The state can thus be discriminated from the cluster state
by using the inequality. Different aspects of four-partite entanglement are
also studied by considering the usefulness of a family of four-qubit mixed
states as resources for two-qubit teleportation. Our results generalize those
in [PRL, {\bf 72}, 797 (1994)].Comment: 13 pages, 1 figur
Fiber Orientation Estimation Guided by a Deep Network
Diffusion magnetic resonance imaging (dMRI) is currently the only tool for
noninvasively imaging the brain's white matter tracts. The fiber orientation
(FO) is a key feature computed from dMRI for fiber tract reconstruction.
Because the number of FOs in a voxel is usually small, dictionary-based sparse
reconstruction has been used to estimate FOs with a relatively small number of
diffusion gradients. However, accurate FO estimation in regions with complex FO
configurations in the presence of noise can still be challenging. In this work
we explore the use of a deep network for FO estimation in a dictionary-based
framework and propose an algorithm named Fiber Orientation Reconstruction
guided by a Deep Network (FORDN). FORDN consists of two steps. First, we use a
smaller dictionary encoding coarse basis FOs to represent the diffusion
signals. To estimate the mixture fractions of the dictionary atoms (and thus
coarse FOs), a deep network is designed specifically for solving the sparse
reconstruction problem. Here, the smaller dictionary is used to reduce the
computational cost of training. Second, the coarse FOs inform the final FO
estimation, where a larger dictionary encoding dense basis FOs is used and a
weighted l1-norm regularized least squares problem is solved to encourage FOs
that are consistent with the network output. FORDN was evaluated and compared
with state-of-the-art algorithms that estimate FOs using sparse reconstruction
on simulated and real dMRI data, and the results demonstrate the benefit of
using a deep network for FO estimation.Comment: A shorter version is accepted by MICCAI 201
Proper Scaling of the Anomalous Hall Effect
Working with epitaxial films of Fe, we succeeded in independent control of
different scattering processes in the anomalous Hall effect. The result
appropriately accounted for the role of phonons, thereby clearly exposing the
fundamental flaws of the standard plot of the anomalous Hall resistivity versus
longitudinal resistivity. A new scaling has been thus established that allows
an unambiguous identification of the intrinsic Berry curvature mechanism as
well as the extrinsic skew scattering and side-jump mechanisms of the anomalous
Hall effect.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Real-time cavity QED with single atoms
We report the first measurement of the real-time evolution of the complex field amplitude brought on by single atom transits. We show the variation in time of both quadrature amplitudes (simultaneously recorded) of the light transmitted through the cavity, as well the resultant optical phase for a single atom transit event. In this particular measurement, the cavity and laser were both detuned by 10 MHz from the Cs resonance
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