123 research outputs found
Fast frequency discrimination and phoneme recognition using a biomimetic membrane coupled to a neural network
In the human ear, the basilar membrane plays a central role in sound
recognition. When excited by sound, this membrane responds with a
frequency-dependent displacement pattern that is detected and identified by the
auditory hair cells combined with the human neural system. Inspired by this
structure, we designed and fabricated an artificial membrane that produces a
spatial displacement pattern in response to an audible signal, which we used to
train a convolutional neural network (CNN). When trained with single frequency
tones, this system can unambiguously distinguish tones closely spaced in
frequency. When instead trained to recognize spoken vowels, this system
outperforms existing methods for phoneme recognition, including the discrete
Fourier transform (DFT), zoom FFT and chirp z-transform, especially when tested
in short time windows. This sound recognition scheme therefore promises
significant benefits in fast and accurate sound identification compared to
existing methods.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure
Comparison of lithomarge and cement-based mortars performance in aggressive aqueous environments
The resistance of room temperature cured geopolymer mortar (GPM) against chemical attacks, i.e. sodium and magnesium sulfate solutions, and sulfuric and hydrochloric acid solutions, was evaluated. GPM was formulated using a lithomarge precursor (low-purity kaolin) to achieve 28-day characteristic compressive strength of 60 MPa. Its performance was compared with an equivalent Portland cement mortar (PCM) having the same paste volume and strength grade. 28-day old bar samples were stored in 0.352 mol/L sulfate solutions for 52 weeks whereas 28-day old cube samples were exposed for 8 weeks to acid solutions with concentration of 0.52 mol/L. GPM showed superior performance against sulfate attack when compared to PCM. No visual deterioration was observed in GPM, the length changes were relatively small, and no changes to the microstructure were detected – in contrast to severely deteriorated PCM. As confirmed by visual observations and lower mass loss, GPM showed better resistance to attack by both acids than PCM. GPM provided a better quality (lower permeability) of an acid-degraded layer, lowering the degree of further deterioration. The main mechanisms of the matrix deterioration of GPM in both acids was dealumination of the hardened binder, with a higher degree of changes detected for sulfuric acid
Two-dimensional optomechanical crystal resonator in gallium arsenide
In the field of quantum computation and communication there is a compelling
need for quantum-coherent frequency conversion between microwave electronics
and infra-red optics. A promising platform for this is an optomechanical
crystal resonator that uses simultaneous photonic and phononic crystals to
create a co-localized cavity coupling an electromagnetic mode to an acoustic
mode, which then via electromechanical interactions can undergo direct
transduction to electronics. The majority of work in this area has been on
one-dimensional nanobeam resonators which provide strong optomechanical
couplings but, due to their geometry, suffer from an inability to dissipate
heat produced by the laser pumping required for operation. Recently, a
quasi-two-dimensional optomechanical crystal cavity was developed in silicon
exhibiting similarly strong coupling with better thermalization, but at a
mechanical frequency above optimal qubit operating frequencies. Here we adapt
this design to gallium arsenide, a natural thin-film single-crystal
piezoelectric that can incorporate electromechanical interactions, obtaining a
mechanical resonant mode at f_m ~ 4.5 GHz ideal for superconducting qubits, and
demonstrating optomechanical coupling g_om/(2pi) ~ 650 kHz
Bidirectional multi-photon communication between remote superconducting nodes
Quantum communication testbeds provide a useful resource for experimentally
investigating a variety of communication protocols. Here we demonstrate a
superconducting circuit testbed with bidirectional multi-photon state transfer
capability using time-domain shaped wavepackets. The system we use to achieve
this comprises two remote nodes, each including a tunable superconducting
transmon qubit and a tunable microwave-frequency resonator, linked by a 2
m-long superconducting coplanar waveguide, which serves as a transmission line.
We transfer both individual and superposition Fock states between the two
remote nodes, and additionally show that this bidirectional state transfer can
be done simultaneously, as well as used to entangle elements in the two nodes.Comment: Main Paper has 6 pages, 4 figures. Supplementary has 14 pages, 16
figures, 2 table
Quantum erasure using entangled surface acoustic phonons
Using the deterministic, on-demand generation of two entangled phonons, we
demonstrate a quantum eraser protocol in a phononic interferometer where the
which-path information can be heralded during the interference process.
Omitting the heralding step yields a clear interference pattern in the
interfering half-quanta pathways; including the heralding step suppresses this
pattern. If we erase the heralded information after the interference has been
measured, the interference pattern is recovered, thereby implementing a
delayed-choice quantum erasure. The test is implemented using a closed
surface-acoustic-wave communication channel into which one superconducting
qubit can emit itinerant phonons that the same or a second qubit can later
re-capture. If the first qubit releases only half of a phonon, the system
follows a superposition of paths during the phonon propagation: either an
itinerant phonon is in the channel, or the first qubit remains in its excited
state. These two paths are made to constructively or destructively interfere by
changing the relative phase of the two intermediate states, resulting in a
phase-dependent modulation of the first qubit's final state, following
interaction with the half-phonon. A heralding mechanism is added to this
construct, entangling a heralding phonon with the signalling phonon. The first
qubit emits a phonon herald conditioned on the qubit being in its excited
state, with no signaling phonon, and the second qubit catches this heralding
phonon, storing which-path information which can either be read out, destroying
the signaling phonon's self-interference, or erased.Comment: 16 pages, 8 figure
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