1,474 research outputs found

    Measuring current by counting electrons in a nanowire quantum dot

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    We measure current by counting single electrons tunneling through an InAs nanowire quantum dot. The charge detector is realized by fabricating a quantum point contact in close vicinity to the nanowire. The results based on electron counting compare well to a direct measurements of the quantum dot current, when taking the finite bandwidth of the detector into account. The ability to detect single electrons also opens up possibilities for manipulating and detecting individual spins in nanowire quantum dots

    Detecting THz current fluctuations in a quantum point contact using a nanowire quantum dot

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    We use a nanowire quantum dot to probe high-frequency current fluctuations in a nearby quantum point contact. The fluctuations drive charge transitions in the quantum dot, which are measured in real-time with single-electron detection techniques. The quantum point contact (GaAs) and the quantum dot (InAs) are fabricated in different material systems, which indicates that the interactions are mediated by photons rather than phonons. The large energy scales of the nanowire quantum dot allow radiation detection in the long-wavelength infrared regime

    Fluorescence of DNA Duplexes: From Model Helices to Natural DNA

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    International audienceRecent fluorescence studies of DNA duplexes with a simple repetitive base sequence have revealed important collective effects which are very sensitive to conformational disorder. In contrast to the monomeric chromophores, whose fluorescence lifetimes are shorter than 1 ps, the fluorescence decays of duplexes span several decades of time. The occurrence of excitation energy transfer, evidenced by the decay of the fluorescence anisotropy on the femtosecond time scale, is a common feature of all of the examined systems. It is explained by the existence of Franck-Condon exciton states, in line with the Vabsorption spectra. Understanding the nature of the long-lived excited states, whose emission dominates the steady-state fluorescence spectrum of natural DNA, will be one of the challenges for the years to come

    From Giessen to Toulouse: 20 years in domestic animal cytogenetics

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    Improving the spatial resolution by effective subtraction technique at Irkutsk incoherent scatter radar: the theory and experiment

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    We describe a sounding technique that allows us to improve spatial resolution of Irkutsk Incoherent Scatter Radar without loosing spectral resolution. The technique is based on transmitting of rectangle pulses of different duration in various sounding runs and subtracting correlation matrixes. Theoretically and experimentally we have shown, that subtraction of the mean-square parameters of the scattered signal for different kinds of the sounding signal one from another allows us to solve the problem within the framework of quasi-static ionospheric parameters approximation.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, to appear at URSI-2011 conferenc

    High-Energy Long-Lived Excited States in DNA Double Strands

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    International audienceDark DNA light: Dark excited states of alternating GC double strands emit fluorescence at 4000 cm-1 higher energy (see spectrum) and with four orders of magnitude longer lifetime compared to the bright * states. Such high-energy long-lived excited states are expected to play a key role in the DNA photoreactivity associated with the appearance of carcinogenic mutations

    A tunable coupling scheme for implementing high-fidelity two-qubit gates

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    The prospect of computational hardware with quantum advantage relies critically on the quality of quantum gate operations. Imperfect two-qubit gates is a major bottleneck for achieving scalable quantum information processors. Here, we propose a generalizable and extensible scheme for a two-qubit coupler switch that controls the qubit-qubit coupling by modulating the coupler frequency. Two-qubit gate operations can be implemented by operating the coupler in the dispersive regime, which is non-invasive to the qubit states. We investigate the performance of the scheme by simulating a universal two-qubit gate on a superconducting quantum circuit, and find that errors from known parasitic effects are strongly suppressed. The scheme is compatible with existing high-coherence hardware, thereby promising a higher gate fidelity with current technologies

    Low Complexity Joint Impairment Mitigation of I/Q Modulator and PA Using Neural Networks

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    neural networks (NNs) for multiple hardware impairments mitigation of a realistic direct conversion transmitter are impractical due to high computational complexity. We propose two methods to reduce the complexity without significant performance penalty. First, propose a novel NN with shortcut connections, referred to as shortcut real-valued time-delay neural network (SVDEN), where trainable neuron-wise shortcut connections are added between the input and output layers. Second, we implement a NN pruning algorithm that gradually removes connections corresponding to minimal weight magnitudes in each layer. Simulation and experimental results show that SVDEN with pruning achieves better performance for compensating frequency-dependent quadrature imbalance and power amplifier nonlinearity than other NN-based and Volterra-based models, while requiring less or similar complexity
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