5,215 research outputs found

    Efficient orthogonal control of tunnel couplings in a quantum dot array

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    Electrostatically-defined semiconductor quantum dot arrays offer a promising platform for quantum computation and quantum simulation. However, crosstalk of gate voltages to dot potentials and inter-dot tunnel couplings complicates the tuning of the device parameters. To date, crosstalk to the dot potentials is routinely and efficiently compensated using so-called virtual gates, which are specific linear combinations of physical gate voltages. However, due to exponential dependence of tunnel couplings on gate voltages, crosstalk to the tunnel barriers is currently compensated through a slow iterative process. In this work, we show that the crosstalk on tunnel barriers can be efficiently characterized and compensated for, using the fact that the same exponential dependence applies to all gates. We demonstrate efficient calibration of crosstalk in a quadruple quantum dot array and define a set of virtual barrier gates, with which we show orthogonal control of all inter-dot tunnel couplings. Our method marks a key step forward in the scalability of the tuning process of large-scale quantum dot arrays.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figure

    Violating conformal invariance: Two-dimensional clusters grafted to wedges, cones, and branch points of Riemann surfaces

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    We present simulations of 2-d site animals on square and triangular lattices in non-trivial geomeLattice animals are one of the few critical models in statistical mechanics violating conformal invariance. We present here simulations of 2-d site animals on square and triangular lattices in non-trivial geometries. The simulations are done with the newly developed PERM algorithm which gives very precise estimates of the partition sum, yielding precise values for the entropic exponent Īø\theta (ZNāˆ¼Ī¼NNāˆ’ĪøZ_N \sim \mu^N N^{-\theta}). In particular, we studied animals grafted to the tips of wedges with a wide range of angles Ī±\alpha, to the tips of cones (wedges with the sides glued together), and to branching points of Riemann surfaces. The latter can either have kk sheets and no boundary, generalizing in this way cones to angles Ī±>360\alpha > 360 degrees, or can have boundaries, generalizing wedges. We find conformal invariance behavior, Īøāˆ¼1/Ī±\theta \sim 1/\alpha, only for small angles (Ī±ā‰Ŗ2Ļ€\alpha \ll 2\pi), while Īøā‰ˆconstāˆ’Ī±/2Ļ€\theta \approx const -\alpha/2\pi for Ī±ā‰«2Ļ€\alpha \gg 2\pi. These scalings hold both for wedges and cones. A heuristic (non-conformal) argument for the behavior at large Ī±\alpha is given, and comparison is made with critical percolation.Comment: 4 pages, includes 3 figure

    A Study on Knowledge Sharing in Vietnamese Organizations

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    Knowledge sharing is very much a sign for the atmosphere of social interactions in the organizations, it depends on the quality of the conversation, formally or informally. In other words, for more effective knowledge sharing, communication competence is required in order to have appropriate conversation. During the past decades, most theories of communication competence have been developed on the basis of ā€œwesternā€ conceptualization. This empirical research is conducted in order to study the organizational communication competence in a non-western country, Vietnam, and the effect of such competence to the employeesā€™ knowledge sharing behavior respectively. Base on the data collected from 11 organizations, the effects of three culture dimensions, namely individualism, power distance, and uncertainty avoidance to the communication competence were statistically analyzed; then, stemming from the certain level of communication competence, the behavior of organizational members towards knowledge sharing was explaine

    How Much Does Money Matter in a Direct Democracy?

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    The fine-structure splitting of quantum confined InxGa1-x Nexcitons is investigated using polarization-sensitive photoluminescence spectroscopy. The majority of the studied emission lines exhibits mutually orthogonal fine-structure components split by 100-340 mu eV, as measured from the cleaved edge of the sample. The exciton and the biexciton reveal identical magnitudes but reversed sign of the energy splitting.Original Publication:Supaluck Amloy, Y T Chen, K F Karlsson, K H Chen, H C Hsu, C L Hsiao, L C Chen and Per-Olof Holtz, Polarization-resolved fine-structure splitting of zero-dimensional InxGa1-xN excitons, 2011, PHYSICAL REVIEW B, (83), 20, 201307.http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.83.201307Copyright: American Physical Societyhttp://www.aps.org
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