994 research outputs found
The cylindrical drift chamber for the meg II
The MEG experiment, at PSI in Switzerland, aims at searching the charged lepton flavor violating
decay m+ ! e+g. MEG has already determined the world best upper limit on the branching ratio: BR<4.2×10−13
@90\%CL with the full data set collected in the years 2009-2013. The new positron tracker is a high transparency single volume, full stereo cylindrical Drift Chamber (DC), immersed in a non uniform longitudinal B-field, co-axial to the muon beam line with length of 1:93 m, internal radius of 17 cm and external radius of 30 cm. It is composed of 10 concentric
layers, divided in 12 identical sector of 16 drift cells each. The single drift cell is approximately
square, with a 20 mm gold plated W sense wire surrounded by 40 mm silver plated Al field wires in a ratio of 5:1. For equalizing the gain of the innermost and outermost layers, two guard layers have been added at proper radii and at appropriate high voltages. The total number of wires amounts to 12288 for an equivalent radiation length per track turn of about 1.45x10-3 X0 when the chamber is filled with an ultra-low mass gas mixture of helium and iso-butane. Due to the high wire density (12wires=cm2), the use of the classical feed-through technique as wire anchoring system could hardly be implemented and therefore it was necessary to develop new wiring strategies. The number of wires and the stringent requirements on the precision of their position and on the uniformity of the wire mechanical tension impose the use of an automatic system (wiring robot) to operate the wiring procedures. Several tests have been performed in different prototypes of the drift chamber, exposed to cosmic rays, test beams and radioactive sources, to fulfill the requirement on the spatial resolution to be less than 110 mm. The drift chamber is currently under construction at INFN and should be completed by the end of 2017 to be then delivered to PSI
A tunable rf SQUID manipulated as flux and phase qubit
We report on two different manipulation procedures of a tunable rf SQUID.
First, we operate this system as a flux qubit, where the coherent evolution
between the two flux states is induced by a rapid change of the energy
potential, turning it from a double well into a single well. The measured
coherent Larmor-like oscillation of the retrapping probability in one of the
wells has a frequency ranging from 6 to 20 GHz, with a theoretically expected
upper limit of 40 GHz. Furthermore, here we also report a manipulation of the
same device as a phase qubit. In the phase regime, the manipulation of the
energy states is realized by applying a resonant microwave drive. In spite of
the conceptual difference between these two manipulation procedures, the
measured decay times of Larmor oscillation and microwave-driven Rabi
oscillation are rather similar. Due to the higher frequency of the Larmor
oscillations, the microwave-free qubit manipulation allows for much faster
coherent operations.Comment: Proceedings of Nobel Symposium "Qubits for future quantum computers",
Goeteborg, Sweden, May 25-28, 2009; to appear in Physica Script
The role of surface chemical reactivity in the stability of electronic nanodevices based on two-dimensional materials "beyond graphene" and topological insulators
Here, we examine the influence of surface chemical reactivity toward ambient
gases on the performance of nanodevices based on two-dimensional materials
"beyond graphene" and novel topological phases of matter. While surface
oxidation in ambient conditions was observed for silicene and phosphorene with
subsequent reduction of the mobility of charge carriers, nanodevices with
active channels of indium selenide, bismuth chalcogenides and transition-metal
dichalcogenides are stable in air. However, air-exposed indium selenide suffers
of p-type doping due to water decomposition on Se vacancies, whereas the low
mobility of charge carriers in transition-metal dichalcogenides increases the
response time of nanodevices. Conversely, bismuth chalcogenides require a
control of crystalline quality, which could represent a serious hurdle for up
scaling
Resonant effects in a SQUID qubit subjected to non adiabatic changes
By quickly modifying the shape of the effective potential of a double SQUID
flux qubit from a single-well to a double-well condition, we experimentally
observe an anomalous behavior, namely an alternance of resonance peaks, in the
probability to find the qubit in a given flux state. The occurrence of
Landau-Zener transitions as well as resonant tunneling between degenerate
levels in the two wells may be invoked to partially justify the experimental
results. A quantum simulation of the time evolution of the system indeed
suggests that the observed anomalous behavior can be imputable to quantum
coherence effects. The interplay among all these mechanisms has a practical
implication for quantum computing purposes, giving a direct measurement of the
limits on the sweeping rates possible for a correct manipulation of the qubit
state by means of fast flux pulses, avoiding transitions to non-computational
states.Comment: 6 pages and 6 figures. The paper, as it is, has been accepted for
publication on PRB on March 201
Microwave-induced thermal escape in Josephson junctions
We investigate, by experiments and numerical simulations, thermal activation
processes of Josephson tunnel junctions in the presence of microwave radiation.
When the applied signal resonates with the Josephson plasma frequency
oscillations, the switching current may become multi-valued in a temperature
range far exceeding the classical to quantum crossover temperature. Plots of
the switching currents traced as a function of the applied signal frequency
show very good agreement with the functional forms expected from Josephson
plasma frequency dependencies on the bias current. Throughout, numerical
simulations of the corresponding thermally driven classical Josephson junction
model show very good agreement with the experimental data.Comment: 10 pages and 4 figure
Fujita modified exponent for scale invariant damped semilinear wave equations
The aim of this paper is to prove a blow-up result of the solution for a semilinear scale invariant damped wave equation under a suitable decay condition on radial initial data. The admissible range for the power of the nonlinear term depends both on the damping coefficient and on the pointwise decay order of the initial data. In addition, we give an upper bound estimate for the lifespan of the solution. It depends not only on the exponent of the nonlinear term and not only on the damping coefficient but also on the size of the decay rate of the initial data
Superconducting tunable flux qubit with direct readout scheme
We describe a simple and efficient scheme for the readout of a tunable flux
qubit, and present preliminary experimental tests for the preparation,
manipulation and final readout of the qubit state, performed in incoherent
regime at liquid Helium temperature. The tunable flux qubit is realized by a
double SQUID with an extra Josephson junction inserted in the large
superconducting loop, and the readout is performed by applying a current ramp
to the junction and recording the value for which there is a voltage response,
depending on the qubit state. This preliminary work indicates the feasibility
and efficiency of the scheme.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figure
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