353 research outputs found
First-principle calculations of Dark Matter scattering off light nuclei
We study the scattering of Dark Matter particles off various light nuclei
within the framework of chiral effective field theory. We focus on scalar
interactions and include one- and two-nucleon scattering processes whose form
and strength are dictated by chiral symmetry. The nuclear wave functions are
calculated from chiral effective field theory interactions as well and we
investigate the convergence pattern of the chiral expansion in the nuclear
potential and the Dark Matter-nucleus currents. This allows us to provide a
systematic uncertainty estimate of our calculations. We provide results for
H, H, and He nuclei which are theoretically interesting and
the latter is a potential target for experiments. We show that two-nucleon
currents can be systematically included but are generally smaller than
predicted by power counting and suffer from significant theoretical
uncertainties even in light nuclei. We demonstrate that accurate high-order
wave functions are necessary in order to incorporate two-nucleon currents. We
discuss scenarios in which one-nucleon contributions are suppressed such that
higher-order currents become dominant
Measurement of the hyperfine structure of the S1/2-D5/2 transition in 43Ca+
The hyperfine structure of the S1/2-D5/2 quadrupole transition at 729 nm in
43Ca+ has been investigated by laser spectroscopy using a single trapped 43Ca+
ion. We determine the hyperfine structure constants of the metastable level as
A=-3.8931(2) MHz and B=-4.241(4) MHz. The isotope shift of the transition with
respect to 40Ca+ was measured to be 4134.713(5) MHz. We demonstrate the
existence of transitions that become independent of the first-order Zeeman
shift at non-zero low magnetic fields. These transitions might be better suited
for building a frequency standard than the well-known 'clock transitions'
between m=0 levels at zero magnetic field.Comment: corrected for sign errors in the hyperfine constants. No corrections
to were made to the data analysi
Process tomography of ion trap quantum gates
A crucial building block for quantum information processing with trapped ions
is a controlled-NOT quantum gate. In this paper, two different sequences of
laser pulses implementing such a gate operation are analyzed using quantum
process tomography. Fidelities of up to 92.6(6)% are achieved for single gate
operations and up to 83.4(8)% for two concatenated gate operations. By process
tomography we assess the performance of the gates for different experimental
realizations and demonstrate the advantage of amplitude--shaped laser pulses
over simple square pulses. We also investigate whether the performance of
concatenated gates can be inferred from the analysis of the single gates
Robust entanglement
It is common belief among physicists that entangled states of quantum systems
loose their coherence rather quickly. The reason is that any interaction with
the environment which distinguishes between the entangled sub-systems collapses
the quantum state. Here we investigate entangled states of two trapped Ca
ions and observe robust entanglement lasting for more than 20 seconds
Evaluating the Performance of Ultra-Low-Field MRI for In-vivo 3D Current Density Imaging of the Human Head
Magnetic fields associated with currents flowing in tissue can be measured
non-invasively by means of zero-field-encoded ultra-low-field magnetic
resonance imaging (ULF MRI) enabling current density imaging (CDI) and possibly
conductivity mapping of human head tissues. Since currents applied to a human
are limited by safety regulations and only a small fraction of the current
passes through the relatively high-resistive skull, a sufficient
signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) may be difficult to obtain when using this method.
In this work, we study the relationship between the image SNR and the SNR of
the field reconstructions from zero-field-encoded data. We evaluate these
results for two existing ULF MRI scanners, one ultra-sensitive single-channel
system and one whole-head multi-channel system, by simulating sequences
necessary for current-density reconstruction. We also derive realistic
current-density and magnetic-field estimates from finite-element-method
simulations based on a three-compartment head model. We found that existing
ULF-MRI systems reach sufficient SNR to detect intra-cranial current
distributions with statistical uncertainty below 10%. However, they also reveal
that image artifacts influence the reconstruction quality. Further, our
simulations indicate that current-density reconstruction in the scalp requires
a resolution less than 5 mm and demonstrate that the necessary sensitivity
coverage can be accomplished by multi-channel devices.Comment: 18 pages, 8 figures. This project has received funding from the
European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant
agreement No 68686
Quasiparticle spin susceptibility in heavy-fermion superconductors : An NMR study compared with specific heat results
Quasi-particle spin susceptibility () for various heavy-fermion
(HF) superconductors are discussed on the basis of the experimental results of
electronic specific heat (), NMR Knight shift () and NMR
relaxation rate () within the framework of the Fermi liquid model for a
Kramers doublet crystal electric field (CEF) ground state.
is calculated from the enhanced Sommerfeld coefficient and
from the quasi-particle Korringa relation
via the relation of
where is the hyperfine
coupling constant, the Abogadoro's number and the Bohr magneton.
For the even-parity (spin-singlet) superconductors CeCuSi, CeCoIn
and UPdAl, the fractional decrease in the Knight shift, , below the superconducting transition temperature () is due to
the decrease of the spin susceptibility of heavy quasi-particle estimated
consistently from and . This result
allows us to conclude that the heavy quasi-particles form the spin-singlet
Cooper pairs in CeCuSi, CeCoIn and UPdAl. On the other
hand, no reduction in the Knight shift is observed in UPt and
UNiAl, nevertheless the estimated values of and
are large enough to be probed experimentally. The odd-parity
superconductivity is therefore concluded in these compounds. The NMR result
provides a convincing way to classify the HF superconductors into either even-
or odd- parity paring together with the identification for the gap structure,
as long as the system has Kramers degeneracy.Comment: 11 pages, 3 tables, 5 figures, RevTex4(LaTex2e
Scale setting the M\"obius Domain Wall Fermion on gradient-flowed HISQ action using the omega baryon mass and the gradient-flow scales and
We report on a sub-percent scale determination using the omega baryon mass
and gradient-flow methods. The calculations are performed on 22 ensembles of
highly improved, rooted staggered sea-quark configurations
generated by the MILC and CalLat Collaborations. The valence quark action used
is M\"obius Domain-Wall fermions solved on these configurations after a
gradient-flow smearing is applied with a flowtime of in lattice
units. The ensembles span four lattice spacings in the range fm, six pion masses in the range MeV and multiple lattice volumes. On each ensemble, the gradient-flow
scales and and the omega baryon mass are
computed. The dimensionless product of these quantities is then extrapolated to
the continuum and infinite volume limits and interpolated to the physical
light, strange and charm quark mass point in the isospin limit, resulting in
the determination of fm and fm with
all sources of statistical and systematic uncertainty accounted for. The
dominant uncertainty in this result is the stochastic uncertainty, providing a
clear path for a few-per-mille uncertainty, as recently obtained by the
Budapest-Marseille-Wuppertal Collaboration.Comment: v3: Published version; v2: Added determination of t_0 as well as w_0;
v1: 13 pages plus appendices. The correlation function data, mass results and
analysis code accompanying this publication can be found at this github
repository: https://github.com/callat-qcd/project_scale_setting_mdwf_his
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