96 research outputs found
A Two-Threshold Model for Scaling Laws of Non-Interacting Snow Avalanches
The sizes of snow slab failure that trigger snow avalanches are power-law
distributed. Such a power-law probability distribution function has also been
proposed to characterize different landslide types. In order to understand this
scaling for gravity driven systems, we introduce a two-threshold 2-d cellular
automaton, in which failure occurs irreversibly. Taking snow slab avalanches as
a model system, we find that the sizes of the largest avalanches just
preceeding the lattice system breakdown are power law distributed. By tuning
the maximum value of the ratio of the two failure thresholds our model
reproduces the range of power law exponents observed for land-, rock- or snow
avalanches. We suggest this control parameter represents the material cohesion
anisotropy.Comment: accepted PR
Locking Local Oscillator Phase to the Atomic Phase via Weak Measurement
We propose a new method to reduce the frequency noise of a Local Oscillator
(LO) to the level of white phase noise by maintaining (not destroying by
projective measurement) the coherence of the ensemble pseudo-spin of atoms over
many measurement cycles. This scheme uses weak measurement to monitor the phase
in Ramsey method and repeat the cycle without initialization of phase and we
call, "atomic phase lock (APL)" in this paper. APL will achieve white phase
noise as long as the noise accumulated during dead time and the decoherence are
smaller than the measurement noise. A numerical simulation confirms that with
APL, Allan deviation is averaged down at a maximum rate that is proportional to
the inverse of total measurement time, tau^-1. In contrast, the current atomic
clocks that use projection measurement suppress the noise only down to the
level of white frequency, in which case Allan deviation scales as tau^-1/2.
Faraday rotation is one of the possible ways to realize weak measurement for
APL. We evaluate the strength of Faraday rotation with 171Yb+ ions trapped in a
linear rf-trap and discuss the performance of APL. The main source of the
decoherence is a spontaneous emission induced by the probe beam for Faraday
rotation measurement. One can repeat the Faraday rotation measurement until the
decoherence become comparable to the SNR of measurement. We estimate this
number of cycles to be ~100 cycles for a realistic experimental parameter.Comment: 18 pages, 7 figures, submitted to New Journal of Physic
DSP algorithms for recovering single-carrier Alamouti coded signals for PON applications
Alamouti space-time block code (STBC) combined with a simple heterodyne coherent receiver enables phase diverse coherent detection without any optical polarization tracking. While such a system consisting of only a 3-dB coupler and a single balanced photodiode has been recently demonstrated using orthogonal frequency-division multiplexed (OFDM) signals, herein we report the first application to single-carrier systems. Applicability of such technique for single-carrier systems is not straightforward since specialized digital signal processing (DSP) algorithms are required for data recovery. In this paper, we address the implementing issues and DSP algorithms applicable for single-carrier (SC) Alamouti STBC based simplified heterodyne receivers. Polarization-insensitive operation of the proposed scheme and its performance are verified by means of simulation for a 12-Gbits/s quadrature phase-shift keying (QPSK) transmission system.European Union (Project ICONE (Grant ID: 608099)), Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (UNLOC (Grant ID: EP/J017582/1)
Quantum frequency estimation with trapped ions and atoms
We discuss strategies for quantum enhanced estimation of atomic transition
frequencies with ions stored in Paul traps or neutral atoms trapped in optical
lattices. We show that only marginal quantum improvements can be achieved using
standard Ramsey interferometry in the presence of collective dephasing, which
is the major source of noise in relevant experimental setups. We therefore
analyze methods based on decoherence free subspaces and prove that quantum
enhancement can readily be achieved even in the case of significantly imperfect
state preparation and faulty detections.Comment: 5 pages + 6 pages appendices; published versio
PAM-4 and duobinary direct modulation of a hybrid InP/SOI DFB laser for 40 Gb/s transmission over 2 km single mode fiber
We demonstrate 40 Gb/s PAM-4 and Duobinary direct modulation of a heterogeneously integrated InP on SOI DFB laser. Transmission measurement was performed using a 2 km NZ-DSF with a PRBS 2(15) and 1.5 V-pp swing voltage
Perturbations of the local gravity field due to mass distribution on precise measuring instruments: a numerical method applied to a cold atom gravimeter
We present a numerical method, based on a FEM simulation, for the
determination of the gravitational field generated by massive objects, whatever
geometry and space mass density they have. The method was applied for the
determination of the self gravity effect of an absolute cold atom gravimeter
which aims at a relative uncertainty of 10-9. The deduced bias, calculated with
a perturbative treatment, is finally presented. The perturbation reaches (1.3
\pm 0.1) \times 10-9 of the Earth's gravitational field.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figure
Spin squeezing, entanglement and quantum metrology with Bose-Einstein condensates
Squeezed states, a special kind of entangled states, are known as a useful
resource for quantum metrology. In interferometric sensors they allow to
overcome the "classical" projection noise limit stemming from the independent
nature of the individual photons or atoms within the interferometer. Motivated
by the potential impact on metrology as wells as by fundamental questions in
the context of entanglement, a lot of theoretical and experimental effort has
been made to study squeezed states. The first squeezed states useful for
quantum enhanced metrology have been proposed and generated in quantum optics,
where the squeezed variables are the coherences of the light field. In this
tutorial we focus on spin squeezing in atomic systems. We give an introduction
to its concepts and discuss its generation in Bose-Einstein condensates. We
discuss in detail the experimental requirements necessary for the generation
and direct detection of coherent spin squeezing. Two exemplary experiments
demonstrating adiabatically prepared spin squeezing based on motional degrees
of freedom and diabatically realized spin squeezing based on internal hyperfine
degrees of freedom are discussed.Comment: Phd tutorial, 23 pages, 17 figure
Towards quantum state tomography of a single polariton state of an atomic ensemble
We present a proposal and a feasibility study for the creation and quantum
state tomography of a single polariton state of an atomic ensemble. The
collective non-classical and non-Gaussian state of the ensemble is generated by
detection of a single forward scattered photon. The state is subsequently
characterized by atomic state tomography performed using strong dispersive
light-atoms interaction followed by a homodyne measurement on the transmitted
light. The proposal is backed by preliminary experimental results showing
projection noise limited sensitivity and a simulation demonstrating the
feasibility of the proposed method for detection of a non-classical and
non-Gaussian state of the mesoscopic atomic ensemble. This work represents the
first attempt of hybrid discrete-continuous variable quantum state processing
with atomic ensembles
Precision atomic gravimeter based on Bragg diffraction
We present a precision gravimeter based on coherent Bragg diffraction of
freely falling cold atoms. Traditionally, atomic gravimeters have used
stimulated Raman transitions to separate clouds in momentum space by driving
transitions between two internal atomic states. Bragg interferometers utilize
only a single internal state, and can therefore be less susceptible to
environmental perturbations. Here we show that atoms extracted from a
magneto-optical trap using an accelerating optical lattice are a suitable
source for a Bragg atom interferometer, allowing efficient beamsplitting and
subsequent separation of momentum states for detection. Despite the inherently
multi-state nature of atom diffraction, we are able to build a Mach-Zehnder
interferometer using Bragg scattering which achieves a sensitivity to the
gravitational acceleration of with an
integration time of 1000s. The device can also be converted to a gravity
gradiometer by a simple modification of the light pulse sequence.Comment: 13 pages, 11 figure
Temperature effects on dislocation core energies in silicon and germanium
Temperature effects on the energetics of the 90-degree partial dislocation in
silicon and germanium are investigated, using non-equilibrium methods to
estimate free energies, coupled with Monte Carlo simulations. Atomic
interactions are described by Tersoff and EDIP interatomic potentials. Our
results indicate that the vibrational entropy has the effect of increasing the
difference in free energy between the two possible reconstructions of the
90-degree partial, namely, the single-period and the double-period geometries.
This effect further increases the energetic stability of the double-period
reconstruction at high temperatures. The results also indicate that anharmonic
effects may play an important role in determining the structural properties of
these defects in the high-temperature regime.Comment: 8 pages in two-column physical-review format with six figure
- …