275 research outputs found
Simulation of quantum dynamics with quantum optical systems
We propose the use of quantum optical systems to perform universal simulation
of quantum dynamics. Two specific implementations that require present
technology are put forward for illustrative purposes. The first scheme consists
of neutral atoms stored in optical lattices, while the second scheme consists
of ions stored in an array of micro--traps. Each atom (ion) supports a
two--level system, on which local unitary operations can be performed through a
laser beam. A raw interaction between neighboring two--level systems is
achieved by conditionally displacing the corresponding atoms (ions). Then,
average Hamiltonian techniques are used to achieve evolutions in time according
to a large class of Hamiltonians.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figure
Quantum spin models with electrons in Penning traps
We propose a scheme to engineer an effective spin Hamiltonian starting from a
system of electrons confined in micro-Penning traps. By means of appropriate
sequences of electromagnetic pulses, alternated to periods of free evolution,
we control the shape and strength of the spin-spin interaction. Moreover, we
can modify the effective magnetic field experienced by the particle spin. This
procedure enables us to reproduce notable quantum spin systems, such as Ising
and XY models. Thanks to its scalability, our scheme can be applied to a fairly
large number of trapped particles within the reach of near future technology.Comment: 22 pages, 1 figure, added minor changes and typos, accepted for
publication in PR
Digital Quantum Simulation of the Holstein Model in Trapped Ions
We propose the implementation of the Holstein model by means of digital
methods in a linear chain of trapped ions. We show how the simulation fidelity
scales with the generation of phononic excitations. We propose a decomposition
and a stepwise trapped-ion implementation of the Holstein Hamiltonian. Via
numerical simulations, we study how the protocol is affected by realistic
gates. Finally, we show how measurements of the size of the simulated polaron
can be performed.Comment: 5 pages + supplemental material, 3+3 figures. Accepted in Physical
Review Letter
Quantum Computing on Lattices using Global Two-Qubit Gate
We study the computation power of lattices composed of two dimensional
systems (qubits) on which translationally invariant global two-qubit gates can
be performed. We show that if a specific set of 6 global two qubit gates can be
performed, and if the initial state of the lattice can be suitably chosen, then
a quantum computer can be efficiently simulatedComment: 9 page
Long time dynamics following a quench in an integrable quantum spin chain: local versus non-local operators and effective thermal behavior
We study the dynamics of the quantum Ising chain following a zero-temperature
quench of the transverse field strength. Focusing on the behavior of two-point
spin correlation functions, we show that the correlators of the order parameter
display an effective asymptotic thermal behavior, i.e., they decay
exponentially to zero, with a phase coherence rate and a correlation length
dictated by the equilibrium law with an effective temperature set by the energy
of the initial state. On the contrary, the two-point correlation functions of
the transverse magnetization or the density-of-kinks operator decay as a
power-law and do not exhibit thermal behavior. We argue that the different
behavior is linked to the locality of the corresponding operator with respect
to the quasi-particles of the model: non-local operators, such as the order
parameter, behave thermally, while local ones do not. We study which features
of the two-point correlators are a consequence of the integrability of the
model by analizing their robustness with respect to a sufficiently strong
integrability-breaking term.Comment: 18 pages, 11 figures, published version. Extensive changes, one
author adde
Layer by layer generation of cluster states
Cluster states can be used to perform measurement-based quantum computation.
The cluster state is a useful resource, because once it has been generated only
local operations and measurements are needed to perform universal quantum
computation. In this paper, we explore techniques for quickly and
deterministically building a cluster state. In particular we consider
generating cluster states on a qubus quantum computer, a computational
architecture which uses a continuous variable ancilla to generate interactions
between qubits. We explore several techniques for building the cluster, with
the number of operations required depending on whether we allow the ability to
destroy previously created controlled-phase links between qubits. In the case
where we can not destroy these links, we show how to create an n x m cluster
using just 3nm -2n -3m/2 + 3 operations. This gives more than a factor of 2
saving over a naive method. Further savings can be obtained if we include the
ability to destroy links, in which case we only need (8nm-4n-4m-8)/3
operations. Unfortunately the latter scheme is more complicated so choosing the
correct order to interact the qubits is considerably more difficult. A half way
scheme, that keeps a modular generation but saves additional operations over
never destroying links requires only 3nm-2n-2m+4 operations. The first scheme
and the last scheme are the most practical for building a cluster state because
they split up the generation into the repetition of simple sections.Comment: 16 pages, 11 figure
Stretching short biopolymers by fields and forces
We study the mechanical properties of semiflexible polymers when the contour
length of the polymer is comparable to its persistence length. We compute the
exact average end-to-end distance and shape of the polymer for different
boundary conditions, and show that boundary effects can lead to significant
deviations from the well-known long-polymer results. We also consider the case
of stretching a uniformly charged biopolymer by an electric field, for which we
compute the average extension and the average shape, which is shown to be
trumpetlike. Our results also apply to long biopolymers when thermal
fluctuations have been smoothed out by a large applied field or force.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figure
Entanglement in spin chains and lattices with long-range Ising-type interactions
We consider N initially disentangled spins, embedded in a ring or
d-dimensional lattice of arbitrary geometry, which interact via some
long--range Ising--type interaction. We investigate relations between
entanglement properties of the resulting states and the distance dependence of
the interaction in the limit N to infinity. We provide a sufficient condition
when bipartite entanglement between blocks of L neighboring spins and the
remaining system saturates, and determine S_L analytically for special
configurations. We find an unbounded increase of S_L as well as diverging
correlation and entanglement length under certain circumstances. For
arbitrarily large N, we can efficiently calculate all quantities associated
with reduced density operators of up to ten particles.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures; V2: presentation improved, references adde
Quantum Simulation of Interacting Fermion Lattice Models in Trapped Ions
We propose a method of simulating efficiently many-body interacting fermion
lattice models in trapped ions, including highly nonlinear interactions in
arbitrary spatial dimensions and for arbitrarily distant couplings. We map
products of fermionic operators onto nonlocal spin operators and decompose the
resulting dynamics in efficient steps with Trotter methods, yielding an overall
protocol that employs only polynomial resources. The proposed scheme can be
relevant in a variety of fields as condensed-matter or high-energy physics,
where quantum simulations may solve problems intractable for classical
computers.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures + Supplementary Materia
Coherence in Microchip Traps
We report the coherent manipulation of internal states of neutral atoms in a
magnetic microchip trap. Coherence lifetimes exceeding 1 s are observed with
atoms at distances of m from the microchip surface. The coherence
lifetime in the chip trap is independent of atom-surface distance within our
measurement accuracy, and agrees well with the results of similar measurements
in macroscopic magnetic traps. Due to the absence of surface-induced
decoherence, a miniaturized atomic clock with a relative stability in the
range can be realized. For applications in quantum information
processing, we propose to use microwave near-fields in the proximity of chip
wires to create potentials that depend on the internal state of the atoms.Comment: Revised version, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. Lett., 4
pages, 4 figure
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