19,462 research outputs found
Evolution of the Chern-Simons Vortices
Based on the gauge potential decomposition theory and the -mapping
theory, the topological inner structure of the Chern-Simons-Higgs vortex has
been showed in detail. The evolution of CSH vortices is studied from the
topological properties of the Higgs scalar field. The vortices are found
generating or annihilating at the limit points and encountering, splitting or
merging at the bifurcation points of the scalar field Comment: 10 pages, 10 figure
Trapped ion quantum computation with transverse phonon modes
We propose a scheme to implement quantum gates on any pair of trapped ions
immersed in a large linear crystal, using interaction mediated by the
transverse phonon modes. Compared with the conventional approaches based on the
longitudinal phonon modes, this scheme is much less sensitive to ion heating
and thermal motion outside of the Lamb-Dicke limit thanks to the stronger
confinement in the transverse direction. The cost for such a gain is only a
moderate increase of the laser power to achieve the same gate speed. We also
show how to realize arbitrary-speed quantum gates with transverse phonon modes
based on simple shaping of the laser pulses.Comment: 5 page
Comment on "Quantum Phase Slips and Transport in Ultrathin Superconducting Wires"
In a recent Letter (Phys. Rev. Lett.78, 1552 (1997) ), Zaikin, Golubev, van
Otterlo, and Zimanyi criticized the phenomenological time-dependent
Ginzburg-Laudau model which I used to study the quantum phase-slippage rate for
superconducting wires. They claimed that they developed a "microscopic" model,
made qualitative improvement on my overestimate of the tunnelling barrier due
to electromagnetic field. In this comment, I want to point out that, i), ZGVZ's
result on EM barrier is expected in my paper; ii), their work is also
phenomenological; iii), their renormalization scheme is fundamentally flawed;
iv), they underestimated the barrier for ultrathin wires; v), their comparison
with experiments is incorrect.Comment: Substantial changes made. Zaikin et al's main result was expected
from my work. They underestimated tunneling barrier for ultrathin wires by
one order of magnitude in the exponen
A new topological aspect of the arbitrary dimensional topological defects
We present a new generalized topological current in terms of the order
parameter field to describe the arbitrary dimensional topological
defects. By virtue of the -mapping method, we show that the topological
defects are generated from the zero points of the order parameter field , and the topological charges of these topological defects are topological
quantized in terms of the Hopf indices and Brouwer degrees of -mapping
under the condition that the Jacobian . When , it is shown that there exist the crucial case of branch process.
Based on the implicit function theorem and the Taylor expansion, we detail the
bifurcation of generalized topological current and find different directions of
the bifurcation. The arbitrary dimensional topological defects are found
splitting or merging at the degenerate point of field function but
the total charge of the topological defects is still unchanged.Comment: 24 pages, 10 figures, Revte
Three-dimensional theory for interaction between atomic ensembles and free-space light
Atomic ensembles have shown to be a promising candidate for implementations
of quantum information processing by many recently-discovered schemes. All
these schemes are based on the interaction between optical beams and atomic
ensembles. For description of these interactions, one assumed either a
cavity-QED model or a one-dimensional light propagation model, which is still
inadequate for a full prediction and understanding of most of the current
experimental efforts which are actually taken in the three-dimensional free
space. Here, we propose a perturbative theory to describe the three-dimensional
effects in interaction between atomic ensembles and free-space light with a
level configuration important for several applications. The calculations reveal
some significant effects which are not known before from the other approaches,
such as the inherent mode-mismatching noise and the optimal mode-matching
conditions. The three-dimensional theory confirms the collective enhancement of
the signal-to-noise ratio which is believed to be one of the main advantage of
the ensemble-based quantum information processing schemes, however, it also
shows that this enhancement need to be understood in a more subtle way with an
appropriate mode matching method.Comment: 16 pages, 9 figure
Arbitrary-speed quantum gates within large ion crystals through minimum control of laser beams
We propose a scheme to implement arbitrary-speed quantum entangling gates on
two trapped ions immersed in a large linear crystal of ions, with minimal
control of laser beams. For gate speeds slower than the oscillation frequencies
in the trap, a single appropriately-detuned laser pulse is sufficient for
high-fidelity gates. For gate speeds comparable to or faster than the local ion
oscillation frequency, we discover a five-pulse protocol that exploits only the
local phonon modes. This points to a method for efficiently scaling the ion
trap quantum computer without shuttling ions.Comment: 4 page
Anharmonicity Induced Resonances for Ultracold Atoms and their Detection
When two atoms interact in the presence of an anharmonic potential, such as
an optical lattice, the center of mass motion cannot be separated from the
relative motion. In addition to generating a confinement-induced resonance (or
shifting the position of an existing Feshbach resonance), the external
potential changes the resonance picture qualitatively by introducing new
resonances where molecular excited center of mass states cross the scattering
threshold. We demonstrate the existence of these resonances, give their
quantitative characterization in an optical superlattice, and propose an
experimental scheme to detect them through controlled sweeping of the magnetic
field.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures; expanded presentatio
Spin Hall effects for cold atoms in a light induced gauge potential
We propose an experimental scheme to observe spin Hall effects with cold
atoms in a light induced gauge potential. Under an appropriate configuration,
the cold atoms moving in a spatially varying laser field experience an
effective spin-dependent gauge potential. Through numerical simulation, we
demonstrate that such a gauge field leads to observable spin Hall currents
under realistic conditions. We also discuss the quantum spin Hall state in an
optical lattice.Comment: 4 pages; The published versio
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Exosomes promote pre-metastatic niche formation in ovarian cancer.
Ovarian cancer is one of the most common gynecological malignancies. Upon initial diagnosis, the majority of patients present with widespread metastatic growth within the peritoneal cavity. This metastatic growth occurs in stages, with the formation of a pre-metastatic niche occurring prior to macroscopic tumor cell invasion. Exosomes released by the primary ovarian tumor are small extracellular vesicles which prepare the distant tumor microenvironment for accelerated metastatic invasion. They regulate intercellular communication between tumor cells and normal stroma, cancer-associated fibroblasts, and local immune cells within the tumor microenvironment. In this review, we highlight the emerging roles of ovarian cancer exosomes as coordinators of pre-metastatic niche formation, biomarkers amenable to liquid biopsy, and targets of chemotherapy
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