79 research outputs found
Demografía de la araña social Theridion nigroannulatum Keyserling, Reserva de Producción Faunística Cuyabeno, Amazonía Ecuatoriana
El presente estudio describe por primera vez aspectos de la demografía y del ciclo de vida de Theridion nigroannulatum Keyserling, en la Reserva de Producción Faunística Cuyabeno (RPFC), a partir de un conjunto de 131 telas censadas y evaluadas periódicamente y de 283 individuos colectados. Se propone un modelo del ciclo de vida de la especie a partir de la descripción de diez categorías consecutivas de tamaño o estadíos, las cuales describen el proceso de desarrollo post-embrionario desde saco de huevos hasta machos y hembras. Se calculan las tasas de supervivencia para esos estadíos y se discute su relación con la proporción de sexos. Se utiliza el volumen ocupado por la tela, para analizarla como herramienta de una cohorte para sobrevivir, como un componente fundamental del cuidado parental que la hembra brinda a sus crías y como descriptor de la abundancia de individuos en una cohorte. Las telas censadas estudiadas estuvieron habitadas por una hembra sola y sus crías (98% de casos) o por dos o más hembras y sus cohortes (2% de los casos). Se documenta además en estas cohortes observaciones de los procesos de apareamiento y dispersión de los que participan los individuos adultos
Quantum key distribution session with 16-dimensional photonic states
The secure transfer of information is an important problem in modern
telecommunications. Quantum key distribution (QKD) provides a solution to this
problem by using individual quantum systems to generate correlated bits between
remote parties, that can be used to extract a secret key. QKD with
D-dimensional quantum channels provides security advantages that grow with
increasing D. However, the vast majority of QKD implementations has been
restricted to two dimensions. Here we demonstrate the feasibility of using
higher dimensions for real-world quantum cryptography by performing, for the
first time, a fully automated QKD session based on the BB84 protocol with
16-dimensional quantum states. Information is encoded in the single-photon
transverse momentum and the required states are dynamically generated with
programmable spatial light modulators. Our setup paves the way for future
developments in the field of experimental high-dimensional QKD.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figure
Certifying an irreducible 1024-dimensional photonic state using refined dimension witnesses
We report on a new class of dimension witnesses, based on quantum random
access codes, which are a function of the recorded statistics and that have
different bounds for all possible decompositions of a high-dimensional physical
system. Thus, it certifies the dimension of the system and has the new distinct
feature of identifying whether the high-dimensional system is decomposable in
terms of lower dimensional subsystems. To demonstrate the practicability of
this technique we used it to experimentally certify the generation of an
irreducible 1024-dimensional photonic quantum state. Therefore, certifying that
the state is not multipartite or encoded using non-coupled different degrees of
freedom of a single photon. Our protocol should find applications in a broad
class of modern quantum information experiments addressing the generation of
high-dimensional quantum systems, where quantum tomography may become
intractable.Comment: Journal version (except for small editorial modifications), 4+12
pages, 7 figure
High-dimensional decoy-state quantum key distribution over 0.3 km of multicore telecommunication optical fibers
Multiplexing is a strategy to augment the transmission capacity of a
communication system. It consists of combining multiple signals over the same
data channel and it has been very successful in classical communications.
However, the use of enhanced channels has only reached limited practicality in
quantum communications (QC) as it requires the complex manipulation of quantum
systems of higher dimensions. Considerable effort is being made towards QC
using high-dimensional quantum systems encoded into the transverse momentum of
single photons but, so far, no approach has been proven to be fully compatible
with the existing telecommunication infrastructure. Here, we overcome such a
technological challenge and demonstrate a stable and secure high-dimensional
decoy-state quantum key distribution session over a 0.3 km long multicore
optical fiber. The high-dimensional quantum states are defined in terms of the
multiple core modes available for the photon transmission over the fiber, and
the decoy-state analysis demonstrates that our technique enables a positive
secret key generation rate up to 25 km of fiber propagation. Finally, we show
how our results build up towards a high-dimensional quantum network composed of
free-space and fiber based linksComment: Please see the complementary work arXiv:1610.01812 (2016
All-in-fiber dynamic orbital angular momentum mode sorting
The orbital angular momentum (OAM) spatial degree of freedom of light has
been widely explored in many applications, including telecommunications,
quantum information and light-based micro-manipulation. The ability to separate
and distinguish between the different transverse spatial modes is called mode
sorting or mode demultiplexing, and it is essential to recover the encoded
information in such applications. An ideal mode sorter should be able to
faithfully distinguish between the different spatial modes, with minimal
losses, have outputs, and have fast response times. All previous mode
sorters rely on bulk optical elements such as spatial light modulators, which
cannot be quickly tuned and have additional losses if they are to be integrated
with optical fiber systems. Here we propose and experimentally demonstrate, to
the best of our knowledge, the first all-in-fiber method for OAM mode sorting
with ultra-fast dynamic reconfigurability. Our scheme first decomposes the OAM
mode in fiber-optical linearly polarized (LP) modes, and then
interferometrically recombines them to determine the topological charge, thus
correctly sorting the OAM mode. In addition, our setup can also be used to
perform ultra-fast routing of the OAM modes. These results show a novel and
fiber integrated form of optical spatial mode sorting that can be readily used
for many new applications in classical and quantum information processing.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figure
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