74,645 research outputs found
Projection Measurement of the Maximally Entangled N-Photon State for a Demonstration of N-Photon de Broglie Wavelength
We construct a projection measurement process for the maximally entangled
N-photon state (the NOON-state) with only linear optical elements and
photodetectors. This measurement process will give null result for any N-photon
state that is orthogonal to the NOON state. We examine the projection process
in more detail for N=4 by applying it to a four-photon state from type-II
parametric down-conversion. This demonstrates an orthogonal projection
measurement with a null result. This null result corresponds to a dip in a
generalized Hong-Ou-Mandel interferometer for four photons. We find that the
depth of the dip in this arrangement can be used to distinguish a genuine
entangled four-photon state from two separate pairs of photons. We next apply
the NOON state projection measurement to a four-photon superposition state from
two perpendicularly oriented type-I parametric down-conversion processes. A
successful NOON state projection is demonstrated with the appearance of the
four-photon de Broglie wavelength in the interference fringe pattern.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, new title, some content change, replaced Fig.
Low-temperature nodal-quasiparticle transport in lightly doped YBa_{2}Cu_{3}O_{y} near the edge of the superconducting doping regime
In-plane transport properties of nonsuperconducting YBa_{2}Cu_{3}O_{y} (y =
6.35) are measured using high-quality untwinned single crystals. We find that
both the a- and b-axis resistivities show log(1/T) divergence down to 80 mK,
and accordingly the thermal conductivity data indicate that the nodal
quasiparticles are progressively localized with lowering temperature. Hence,
both the charge and heat transport data do not support the existence of a
"thermal metal" in nonsuperconducting YBa_{2}Cu_{3}O_{y}, as opposed to a
recent report by Sutherland {\it et al.} [Phys. Rev. Lett. {\bf 94}, 147004
(2005)]. Besides, the present data demonstrate that the peculiar log(1/T)
resistivity divergence of cuprate is {\it not} a property associated with
high-magnetic fields.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures. Our previous main claim that the pseudogap state
of cuprates is inherently insulating was found to be erroneous and has been
retracted; the paper now focuses on the log(1/T) resistivity divergence and
its implication
Ideal strengths and bonding properties of PuO2 under tension
We perform a first-principles computational tensile test on PuO based
on density-functional theory within local density approximation (LDA)+\emph{U}
formalism to investigate its structural, mechanical, magnetic, and intrinsic
bonding properties in the four representative directions: [001], [100], [110],
and [111]. The stress-strain relations show that the ideal tensile strengths in
the four directions are 81.2, 80.5, 28.3, and 16.8 GPa at strains of 0.36,
0.36, 0.22, and 0.18, respectively. The [001] and [100] directions are
prominently stronger than other two directions since that more PuO bonds
participate in the pulling process. Through charge and density of states
analysis along the [001] direction, we find that the strong mixed
ionic/covalent character of PuO bond is weakened by tensile strain and
PuO will exhibit an insulator-to-metal transition after tensile stress
exceeds about 79 GPa.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figure
Realizing quantum controlled phase-flip gate through quantum dot in silicon slow-light photonic crystal waveguide
We propose a scheme to realize controlled phase gate between two single
photons through a single quantum dot in slow-light silicon photonic crystal
waveguide. Enhanced Purcell factor and beta factor lead to high gate fidelity
over broadband frequencies compared to cavity-assisted system. The excellent
physical integration of this silicon photonic crystal waveguide system provides
tremendous potential for large-scale quantum information processing.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figure
Electron-doped phosphorene: A potential monolayer superconductor
We predict by first-principles calculations that the electron-doped
phosphorene is a potential BCS-like superconductor. The stretching modes at the
Brillouin-zone center are remarkably softened by the electron-doping, which
results in the strong electron-phonon coupling. The superconductivity can be
introduced by a doped electron density () above
cm, and may exist over the liquid helium temperature when cm. The maximum critical temperature is predicted to be
higher than 10 K. The superconductivity of phosphorene will significantly
broaden the applications of this novel material
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