6,461 research outputs found
Temperature compensated current source
A current source was designed which is substantially independent of variations of temperature. The current source may be made either to have a linear dependence upon changes of temperature or, by the simple addition of a resistor, may be made substantially independent of temperature variations. Since the current source consists only of transistors of one conductivity type and resistors, it is ideally suited for manufacture in the form of a monolithic integrated circuit
Phonon-induced dephasing of singlet-triplet superpositions in double quantum dots without spin-orbit coupling
We show that singlet-triplet superpositions of two-electron spin states in a
double quantum dot undergo a phonon-induced pure dephasing which relies only on
the tunnel coupling between the dots and on the Pauli exclusion principle. As
such, this dephasing process is independent of spin-orbit coupling or hyperfine
interactions. The physical mechanism behind the dephasing is elastic phonon
scattering, which persists to much lower temperatures than real phonon-induced
transitions. Quantitative calculations performed for a lateral GaAs/AlGaAs
gate-defined double quantum dot yield micro-second dephasing times at
sub-Kelvin temperatures, which is consistent with experimental observations.Comment: Extended versio
New method to simulate quantum interference using deterministic processes and application to event-based simulation of quantum computation
We demonstrate that networks of locally connected processing units with a
primitive learning capability exhibit behavior that is usually only attributed
to quantum systems. We describe networks that simulate single-photon
beam-splitter and Mach-Zehnder interferometer experiments on a causal,
event-by-event basis and demonstrate that the simulation results are in
excellent agreement with quantum theory. We also show that this approach can be
generalized to simulate universal quantum computers.Comment: J. Phys. Soc. Jpn. (in press) http://www.compphys.net/dl
Early Thermal Evolution of Planetesimals and its Impact on Processing and Dating of Meteoritic Material
Radioisotopic ages for meteorites and their components provide constraints on
the evolution of small bodies: timescales of accretion, thermal and aqueous
metamorphism, differentiation, cooling and impact metamorphism. Realising that
the decay heat of short-lived nuclides (e.g. 26Al, 60Fe), was the main heat
source driving differentiation and metamorphism, thermal modeling of small
bodies is of utmost importance to set individual meteorite age data into the
general context of the thermal evolution of their parent bodies, and to derive
general conclusions about the nature of planetary building blocks in the early
solar system. As a general result, modelling easily explains that iron
meteorites are older than chondrites, as early formed planetesimals experienced
a higher concentration of short-lived nuclides and more severe heating.
However, core formation processes may also extend to 10 Ma after formation of
Calcium-Aluminum-rich inclusions (CAIs). A general effect of the porous nature
of the starting material is that relatively small bodies (< few km) will also
differentiate if they form within 2 Ma after CAIs. A particular interesting
feature to be explored is the possibility that some chondrites may derive from
the outer undifferentiated layers of asteroids that are differentiated in their
interiors. This could explain the presence of remnant magnetization in some
chondrites due to a planetary magnetic field.Comment: 24 pages, 9 figures, Accepted for publication as a chapter in
Protostars and Planets VI, University of Arizona Press (2014), eds. H.
Beuther, R. Klessen, C. Dullemond, Th. Hennin
Decoherence in a quantum harmonic oscillator monitored by a Bose-Einstein condensate
We investigate the dynamics of a quantum oscillator, whose evolution is
monitored by a Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC) trapped in a symmetric double
well potential. It is demonstrated that the oscillator may experience various
degrees of decoherence depending on the variable being measured and the state
in which the BEC is prepared. These range from a `coherent' regime in which
only the variances of the oscillator position and momentum are affected by
measurement, to a slow (power law) or rapid (Gaussian) decoherence of the mean
values themselves.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, lette
Shaping an Itinerant Quantum Field by Dissipation
We show that inducing sidebands in the emission of a single emitter into a
one dimensional waveguide, together with a dissipative re-pumping process, a
photon field is cooled down to a squeezed vacuum. Our method does not require
to be in the strong coupling regime, works with a continuum of propagating
field modes and it may lead to sources of tunable multimode squeezed light in
circuit QED systems.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Transition from diffusive to ballistic dynamics for a class of finite quantum models
The transport of excitation probabilities amongst weakly coupled subunits is
investigated for a class of finite quantum systems. It is demonstrated that the
dynamical behavior of the transported quantity depends on the considered length
scale, e. g., the introduced distinction between diffusive and ballistic
transport appears to be a scale-dependent concept, especially since a
transition from diffusive to ballistic behavior is found in the limit of small
as well as in the limit of large length scales. All these results are derived
by an application of the time-convolutionless projection operator technique and
are verified by the numerical solution of the full time-dependent Schroedinger
equation which is obtained by exact diagonalization for a range of model
parameters.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, approved for publication in Physical Review
Letter
- …
