23 research outputs found
Quantum Machines
We discuss quantum information processing machines. We start with single
purpose machines that either redistribute quantum information or identify
quantum states. We then move on to machines that can perform a number of
functions, with the function they perform being determined by a program, which
is itself a quantum state. Examples of both deterministic and probabilistic
programmable machines are given, and we conclude with a discussion of the
utility of quantum programs.Comment: To appear in Contemporary Physic
Local Hidden Variables Underpinning of Entanglement and Teleportation
Entangled states whose Wigner functions are non-negative may be viewed as
being accounted for by local hidden variables (LHV). Recently, there were
studies of Bell's inequality violation (BIQV) for such states in conjunction
with the well known theorem of Bell that precludes BIQV for theories that have
LHV underpinning. We extend these studies to teleportation which is also based
on entanglement. We investigate if, to what extent, and under what conditions
may teleportation be accounted for via LHV theory. Our study allows us to
expose the role of various quantum requirements. These are, e.g., the
uncertainty relation among non-commuting operators, and the no-cloning theorem
which forces the complete elimination of the teleported state at its initial
port.Comment: 24 pages, 1 figure, accepted Found. Phy
Generation of atom-photon entangled states in atomic Bose-Einstein condensate via electromagnetically induced transparency
In this paper, we present a method to generate continuous-variable-type
entangled states between photons and atoms in atomic Bose-Einstein condensate
(BEC). The proposed method involves an atomic BEC with three internal states, a
weak quantized probe laser and a strong classical coupling laser, which form a
three-level Lambda-shaped BEC system. We consider a situation where the BEC is
in electromagnetically induced transparency (EIT) with the coupling laser being
much stronger than the probe laser. In this case, the upper and intermediate
levels are unpopulated, so that their adiabatic elimination enables an
effective two-mode model involving only the atomic field at the lowest internal
level and the quantized probe laser field. Atom-photon quantum entanglement is
created through laser-atom and inter-atomic interactions, and two-photon
detuning. We show how to generate atom-photon entangled coherent states and
entangled states between photon (atom) coherent states and atom-(photon-)
macroscopic quantum superposition (MQS) states, and between photon-MQS and
atom-MQS states.Comment: 9 pages, 1 figur
Chaos and the Quantum Phase Transition in the Dicke Model
We investigate the quantum chaotic properties of the Dicke Hamiltonian; a
quantum-optical model which describes a single-mode bosonic field interacting
with an ensemble of two-level atoms. This model exhibits a zero-temperature
quantum phase transition in the N \go \infty limit, which we describe exactly
in an effective Hamiltonian approach. We then numerically investigate the
system at finite and, by analysing the level statistics, we demonstrate
that the system undergoes a transition from quasi-integrability to quantum
chaotic, and that this transition is caused by the precursors of the quantum
phase-transition. Our considerations of the wavefunction indicate that this is
connected with a delocalisation of the system and the emergence of macroscopic
coherence. We also derive a semi-classical Dicke model, which exhibits
analogues of all the important features of the quantum model, such as the phase
transition and the concurrent onset of chaos.Comment: 51 pages, 15 figures, late
Rural be/longing: community, conviviality and social organizations in rural England
This article considers how structures of community feeling and ways of belonging are produced, maintained and recreated in local rural environments. It argues that rural social organizations, which operate through, and are embedded in, notions of conviviality and community, have taken up a par ticular role in this process. While using the concept of community with all the usual sociological caveats in place, the article seeks to emphasize a) the importance of the sociality of community and b) the need to understand the ways in which this sociality is continually shaped by the potent imaginary of what ‘community’ and, more specifically, what ‘rural community’ mean and represent. Drawing on a qualitative data set the article details the emo- tional connectivity participants made between the local and the social and the everyday routine practices involved in constructing a community sensibility. It con- cludes by examining how ambiguity and governance are part of these processes