121 research outputs found
Asymptotic behaviour of the probability density in one dimension
We demonstrate that the probability density of a quantum state moving freely
in one dimension may decay faster than 1/t. Inverse quadratic and cubic
dependences are illustrated with analytically solvable examples. Decays faster
than 1/t allow the existence of dwell times and delay times.Comment: 5 pages, one eps figure include
Canonical circuit quantization with linear nonreciprocal devices
Nonreciprocal devices effectively mimic the breaking of time-reversal
symmetry for the subspace of dynamical variables that they couple, and can be
used to create chiral information processing networks. We study the systematic
inclusion of ideal gyrators and circulators into Lagrangian and Hamiltonian
descriptions of lumped-element electrical networks. The proposed theory is of
wide applicability in general nonreciprocal networks on the quantum regime. We
apply it to pedagogical and pathological examples of circuits containing
Josephson junctions and ideal nonreciprocal elements described by admittance
matrices, and compare it with the more involved treatment of circuits based on
nonreciprocal devices characterized by impedance or scattering matrices.
Finally, we discuss the dual quantization of circuits containing phase-slip
junctions and nonreciprocal devices.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures; changes made to match the accepted version in
PR
Duality and the Equivalence Principle of Quantum Mechanics
Following a suggestion by Vafa, we present a quantum-mechanical model for
S-duality symmetries observed in the quantum theories of fields, strings and
branes. Our formalism may be understood as the topological limit of Berezin's
metric quantisation of the upper half-plane H, in that the metric dependence
has been removed. Being metric-free, our prescription makes no use of global
quantum numbers. Quantum numbers arise only locally, after the choice of a
local vacuum to expand around. Our approach may be regarded as a manifestly non
perturbative formulation of quantum mechanics, in that we take no classical
phase space and no Poisson brackets as a starting point. The reparametrisation
invariance of H under SL(2,R) induces a natural SL(2,R) action on the quantum
mechanical operators that implements S-duality. We also link our approach with
the equivalence principle of quantum mechanics recently formulated by Faraggi
and Matone.Comment: 14 pages, JHEP styl
Quantum Memristors
Technology based on memristors, resistors with memory whose resistance
depends on the history of the crossing charges, has lately enhanced the
classical paradigm of computation with neuromorphic architectures. However, in
contrast to the known quantized models of passive circuit elements, such as
inductors, capacitors or resistors, the design and realization of a quantum
memristor is still missing. Here, we introduce the concept of a quantum
memristor as a quantum dissipative device, whose decoherence mechanism is
controlled by a continuous-measurement feedback scheme, which accounts for the
memory. Indeed, we provide numerical simulations showing that memory effects
actually persist in the quantum regime. Our quantization method, specifically
designed for superconducting circuits, may be extended to other quantum
platforms, allowing for memristor-type constructions in different quantum
technologies. The proposed quantum memristor is then a building block for
neuromorphic quantum computation and quantum simulations of non-Markovian
systems
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