6,717 research outputs found
Cryogenic-coolant He4-superconductor dynamic and static interactions
A composite superconducting material (NbTi-Cu) was evaluated with emphasis on post quench solid cooling interaction regimes. The quasi-steady runs confirm the existence of a thermodynamic limiting thickness for insulating coatings. Two distinctly different post quench regimes of coated composites are shown to relate to the limiting thickness. Only one regime,, from quench onset to the peak value, revealed favorable coolant states, in particular in He2. Transient recovery shows favorable recovery times from this post quench regime (not drastically different from bare conductors) for both single coated specimens and a coated conductor bundle
Topological twisted sigma model with H-flux revisited
In this paper we revisit the topological twisted sigma model with H-flux. We
explicitly expand and then twist the worldsheet Lagrangian for bi-Hermitian
geometry. we show that the resulting action consists of a BRST exact term and
pullback terms, which only depend on one of the two generalized complex
structures and the B-field. We then discuss the topological feature of the
model.Comment: 16 pages. Appendix adde
D-branes, surface operators, and ADHM quiver representations
A supersymmetric quantum mechanical model is constructed for BPS states bound to surface operators in five dimensional SU(r) gauge the- ories using D-brane engineering. This model represents the effective action of a certain D2-brane configuration, and is naturally obtained by dimensional reduction of a quiver (0,2) gauged linear sigma model. In a special stability chamber, the resulting moduli space of quiver representations is shown to be smooth and isomorphic to a moduli space of framed quotients on the projec- tive plane. A precise conjecture relating a K-theoretic partition function of this moduli space to refined open string invariants of toric lagrangian branes is formulated for conifold and local P1
7 P1 geometries
Limitations of Quantum Simulation Examined by Simulating a Pairing Hamiltonian using Nuclear Magnetic Resonance
Quantum simulation uses a well-known quantum system to predict the behavior
of another quantum system. Certain limitations in this technique arise,
however, when applied to specific problems, as we demonstrate with a
theoretical and experimental study of an algorithm to find the low-lying
spectrum of a Hamiltonian. While the number of elementary quantum gates does
scale polynomially with the size of the system, it increases inversely to the
desired error bound . Making such simulations robust to decoherence
using fault-tolerance constructs requires an additional factor of
gates. These constraints are illustrated by using a three qubit nuclear
magnetic resonance system to simulate a pairing Hamiltonian, following the
algorithm proposed by Wu, Byrd, and Lidar.Comment: 6 pages, 2 eps figure
Using error correction to determine the noise model
Quantum error correcting codes have been shown to have the ability of making
quantum information resilient against noise. Here we show that we can use
quantum error correcting codes as diagnostics to characterise noise. The
experiment is based on a three-bit quantum error correcting code carried out on
a three-qubit nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) quantum information processor.
Utilizing both engineered and natural noise, the degree of correlations present
in the noise affecting a two-qubit subsystem was determined. We measured a
correlation factor of c=0.5+/-0.2 using the error correction protocol, and
c=0.3+/-0.2 using a standard NMR technique based on coherence pathway
selection. Although the error correction method demands precise control, the
results demonstrate that the required precision is achievable in the
liquid-state NMR setting.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures. Added discussion section, improved figure
- …