475 research outputs found
The fabrication of reproducible superconducting scanning tunneling microscope tips
Superconducting scanning tunneling microscope tips have been fabricated with
a high degree of reproducibility. The fabrication process relies on sequential
deposition of superconducting Pb and a proximity-coupled Ag capping layer onto
a Pt/Ir tip. The tips were characterized by tunneling into both normal-metal
and superconducting films. The simplicity of the fabrication process, along
with the stability and reproducibility of the tips, clear the way for tunneling
studies with a well-characterized, scannable superconducting electrode.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, REVTeX. Submitted to Rev. Sci. Instru
A systematic review of associations between environmental exposures and development of asthma in children aged up to 9 years
Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. For permission to use (where not already granted under a licence) please go to http://group.bmj.com/group/rights-licensing/permissions.Peer reviewedPublisher PD
Gigahertz quantum key distribution with InGaAs avalanche photodiodes
We report a demonstration of quantum key distribution (QKD) at GHz clock
rates with InGaAs avalanche photodiodes (APDs) operating in a self-differencing
mode. Such a mode of operation allows detection of extremely weak avalanches so
that the detector afterpulse noise is sufficiently suppressed. The system is
characterized by a secure bit rate of 2.37 Mbps at 5.6 km and 27.9 kbps at 65.5
km when the fiber dispersion is not compensated. After compensating the fiber
dispersion, the QKD distance is extended to 101 km, resulting in a secure key
rate of 2.88 kbps. Our results suggest that InGaAs APDs are very well suited to
GHz QKD applications.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Coexistence of high-bit-rate quantum key distribution and data on optical fiber
Quantum key distribution (QKD) uniquely allows distribution of cryptographic
keys with security verified by quantum mechanical limits. Both protocol
execution and subsequent applications require the assistance of classical data
communication channels. While using separate fibers is one option, it is
economically more viable if data and quantum signals are simultaneously
transmitted through a single fiber. However, noise-photon contamination arising
from the intense data signal has severely restricted both the QKD distances and
secure key rates. Here, we exploit a novel temporal-filtering effect for
noise-photon rejection. This allows high-bit-rate QKD over fibers up to 90 km
in length and populated with error-free bidirectional Gb/s data communications.
With high-bit rate and range sufficient for important information
infrastructures, such as smart cities and 10 Gbit Ethernet, QKD is a
significant step closer towards wide-scale deployment in fiber networks.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figure
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