5,075 research outputs found
The Emergence of Multiple Robust Zonal Jets from Freely Evolving, Three-Dimensional Stratified Geostrophic Turbulence with Applications to Jupiter
Three-dimensional numerical simulations of freely evolving stratified geostrophic turbulence on the β plane are presented as a simplified model of zonal jet formation on Jupiter. This study samples the parameter space that covers the low, middle, and high latitudes of Jupiter by varying the central latitude of the β plane. The results show that robust zonal jets can emerge from initial small-scale random turbulence through the upscale redistribution of the kinetic energy in the spectral space. The resulting flow’s sensitivities to the flow’s deformation radius LD and the two-dimensional Rhines length Lβ = (U/β)^½ (U is the characteristic turbulence velocity and β is the meridional gradient of the planetary vorticity) are tested, revealing that whether the outcome of the upscale energy transfer becomes dominated by jets or vortices depends on the relative values of LD and Lβ. The values of Lβ and LD are varied by tuning the β-plane parameters, and it is found that the flow transitions from a jet-dominated regime in Lβ ≲ LD to a vortical flow in Lβ ≳ LD. A height-to-width ratio equal to f/N, the Coriolis parameter divided by the Brunt–Väisälä frequency, has previously been established for stable vortices, and this paper shows that this aspect ratio also applies to the zonal jets that emerge in these simulations
On tuning a reactive silencer by varying the position of an internal membrane
A mode-matching method is used to investigate the performance of a two-dimensional, modified reactive silencer. The modification takes the form of a membrane which is attached to the internal walls of the expansion chamber parallel to the axis of the inlet/outlet ducts. The height of the membrane above the level of the inlet/outlet ducts can be varied and, by this means, the device is tuned. It is shown that the stopband produced by the silencer can be broadened and/or shifted depending upon the height to which the membrane is raised. Attention is focused on the efficiency of the device at low-frequencies - the regime where dissipative silencers are usually least effective. The potential use of the device as a component in a hybrid silencer for heating ventilation and air-conditioning (HVAC) ducting systems is discussed
Alternate Scheme for Optical Cluster-State Generation without Number-Resolving Photon Detectors
We design a controlled-phase gate for linear optical quantum computing by
using photodetectors that cannot resolve photon number. An intrinsic
error-correction circuit corrects errors introduced by the detectors. Our
controlled-phase gate has a 1/4 success probability. Recent development in
cluster-state quantum computing has shown that a two-qubit gate with non-zero
success probability can build an arbitrarily large cluster state with only
polynomial overhead. Hence, it is possible to generate optical cluster states
without number-resolving detectors and with polynomial overhead.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, 4 tables; made significant revisions and changed
forma
The creation of large photon-number path entanglement conditioned on photodetection
Large photon-number path entanglement is an important resource for enhanced
precision measurements and quantum imaging. We present a general constructive
protocol to create any large photon number path-entangled state based on the
conditional detection of single photons. The influence of imperfect detectors
is considered and an asymptotic scaling law is derived.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
High-fidelity linear optical quantum computing with polarization encoding
We show that the KLM scheme [Knill, Laflamme and Milburn, Nature {\bf 409},
46] can be implemented using polarization encoding, thus reducing the number of
path modes required by half. One of the main advantages of this new
implementation is that it naturally incorporates a loss detection mechanism
that makes the probability of a gate introducing a non-detected error, when
non-ideal detectors are considered, dependent only on the detector dark-count
rate and independent of its efficiency. Since very low dark-count rate
detectors are currently available, a high-fidelity gate (probability of error
of order conditional on the gate being successful) can be implemented
using polarization encoding. The detector efficiency determines the overall
success probability of the gate but does not affect its fidelity. This can be
applied to the efficient construction of optical cluster states with very high
fidelity for quantum computing.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures. Improved construction of high-fidelity entangled
ancilla; references adde
Generation of Large Number-Path Entanglement Using Linear Optics and Feed-Forward
We show how an idealised measurement procedure can condense photons from two
modes into one, and how, by feeding forward the results of the measurement, it
is possible to generate efficiently superpositions of components for which only
one mode is populated, commonly called ``N00N states''. For the basic
procedure, sources of number states leak onto a beam splitter, and the output
ports are monitored by photodetectors. We find that detecting a fixed fraction
of the input at one output port suffices to direct the remainder to the same
port with high probability, however large the initial state. When instead
photons are detected at both ports, Schr\"{o}dinger cat states are produced. We
describe a circuit for making the components of such a state orthogonal, and
another for subsequent conversion to a N00N state. Our approach scales
exponentially better than existing proposals. Important applications include
quantum imaging and metrology
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