1,850 research outputs found
Digital Quantum Rabi and Dicke Models in Superconducting Circuits
We propose the analog-digital quantum simulation of the quantum Rabi and
Dicke models using circuit quantum electrodynamics (QED). We find that all
physical regimes, in particular those which are impossible to realize in
typical cavity QED setups, can be simulated via unitary decomposition into
digital steps. Furthermore, we show the emergence of the Dirac equation
dynamics from the quantum Rabi model when the mode frequency vanishes. Finally,
we analyze the feasibility of this proposal under realistic superconducting
circuit scenarios.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures. Published in Scientific Report
Surface and smectic layering transitions in binary mixtures of parallel hard rods
The surface phase behavior of binary mixtures of colloidal hard rods in
contact with a solid substrate (hard wall) is studied, with special emphasis on
the region of the phase diagram that includes the smectic A phase. The
colloidal rods are modelled as hard cylinders of the same diameter and
different lengths, in the approximation of perfect alignment. A
fundamental--measure density functional is used to obtain equilibrium density
profiles and thermodynamic properties such as surface tensions and adsorption
coefficients. The bulk phase diagram exhibits nematic-smectic and
smectic-smectic demixing, with smectic phases having different compositions; in
some cases they are microfractionated. The calculated surface phase diagram of
the wall-nematic interface shows a very rich phase behavior, including layering
transitions and complete wetting at high pressures, whereby an infinitely thick
smectic film grows at the wall via an infinite sequence of stepwise
first--order layering transitions. For lower pressures complete wetting also
obtains, but here the smectic film grows in a continuous fashion. Finally, at
very low pressures, the wall-nematic interface exhibits critical adsorption by
the smectic phase, due to the second-order character of the bulk
nematic-smectic transition.Comment: 13 pages, 13 figures. Accepted for publication in Physical Review
HESS J1632-478: an energetic relic
HESS J1632-478 is an extended and still unidentified TeV source in the
galactic plane. In order to identify the source of the very high energy
emission and to constrain its spectral energy distribution, we used a deep
observation of the field obtained with XMM-Newton together with data from
Molonglo, Spitzer and Fermi to detect counterparts at other wavelengths. The
flux density emitted by HESS J1632-478 peaks at very high energies and is more
than 20 times weaker at all other wavelengths probed. The source spectrum
features two large prominent bumps with the synchrotron emission peaking in the
ultraviolet and the external inverse Compton emission peaking in the TeV. HESS
J1632-478 is an energetic pulsar wind nebula with an age of the order of 10^4
years. Its bolometric (mostly GeV-TeV) luminosity reaches 10% of the current
pulsar spin down power. The synchrotron nebula has a size of 1 pc and contains
an unresolved point-like X-ray source, probably the pulsar with its wind
termination shock.Comment: A&A accepted, 9 pages, 5 figures, 4 table
Density-functional study of defects in two-dimensional circular nematic nanocavities
We use density--functional theory to study the structure of two-dimensional
defects inside a circular nematic nanocavity. The density, nematic order
parameter, and director fields, as well as the defect core energy and core
radius, are obtained in a thermodynamically consistent way for defects with
topological charge (with radial and tangential symmetries) and .
An independent calculation of the fluid elastic constants, within the same
theory, allows us to connect with the local free--energy density predicted by
elastic theory, which in turn provides a criterion to define a defect core
boundary and a defect core free energy for the two types of defects. The radial
and tangential defects turn out to have very different properties, a feature
that a previous Maier--Saupe theory could not account for due to the simplified
nature of the interactions --which caused all elastic constants to be equal. In
the case with two defects in the cavity, the elastic r\'egime cannot
be reached due to the small radii of the cavities considered, but some trends
can already be obtained.Comment: 9 figures. Accepted for publication in liquid crystal
Fermionic Models with Superconducting Circuits
We propose a method for the efficient quantum simulation of fermionic systems
with superconducting circuits. It consists in the suitable use of Jordan-Wigner
mapping, Trotter decomposition, and multiqubit gates, be with the use of a
quantum bus or direct capacitive couplings. We apply our method to the
paradigmatic cases of 1D and 2D Fermi-Hubbard models, involving couplings with
nearest and next-nearest neighbours. Furthermore, we propose an optimal
architecture for this model and discuss the benchmarking of the simulations in
realistic circuit quantum electrodynamics setups.Comment: Published in EPJ Quantum Technolog
Deconstructing organizational resilience: A multiple-case study
This study extends previous research on organizational resilience by focusing on its relational resilience dimension and integrating with its operational resilience dimension. Our main goal is to understand relational resilience construct and complement it with operational resilience construct to have a complete and balanced picture of organizational resilience. We analyze complementary contributions of relational and operational resilience on organizational resilience in survival and sustainability dimensions. A multiple-case study has been conducted on two manufacturing and two service organizations. This study has conceptualized relational resilience beyond its survival dimension and extended it in sustainability dimension. This understanding enables congruence with the recent conceptualization of organizational and operational resilience in survival and sustainability aspects
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