120,525 research outputs found
A non-Markovian optical signature for detecting entanglement in coupled excitonic qubits
We identify an optical signature for detecting entanglement in experimental
nanostructure systems comprising coupled excitonic qubits. This signature owes
its strength to non-Markovian dynamical effects in the second-order temporal
coherence function of the emitted radiation. We calculate autocorrelation and
cross-correlation functions for both selective and collective light excitation,
and prove that the coherence properties of the emitted light do indeed carry
information about the entanglement of the initial multi-qubit state.
We also show that this signature can survive in the presence of a noisy
environment.Comment: 4 pages, 4 color figures. Minor changes. Accepted version to be
published in Europhysics Letter
A solvable model for excitonic complexes in one dimension
It is known experimentally that stable few-body clusters containing
negatively-charged electrons (e) and positively-charged holes (h) can exist in
low-dimensional semiconductor nanostructures. In addition to the familiar
exciton (e+h), three-body 'charged excitons' (2e+h and 2h+e) have also been
observed. Much less is known about the properties of such charged excitons
since three-body problems are generally very difficult to solve, even
numerically. Here we introduce a simple model, which can be considered as an
extended Calogero model, to calculate analytically the energy spectra for both
a charged exciton and a neutral exciton in a one-dimensional nanostructure,
such as a finite-length quantum wire. Apart from its physical motivation, the
model is of mathematical interest in that it can be related to the Heun (or
Heine) equation and, as shown explicitly, highly accurate, closed form
solutions can be obtained.Comment: 14 pages, 3 figures, To appear in J. Math. Phy
Ultrafast optical signature of quantum superpositions in a nanostructure
We propose an unambiguous signature for detecting quantum superposition
states in a nanostructure, based on current ultrafast spectroscopy techniques.
The reliable generation of such superposition states via Hadamard-like quantum
gates is crucial for implementing solid-state based quantum information
schemes. The signature originates from a remarkably strong photon antibunching
effect which is enhanced by non-Markovian dynamics.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures. Published in Phys. Rev. B (Rapid Communications
Dynamical properties of a two-dimensional electron gas in a magnetic field within the composite fermion model
We investigate the response of a two-dimensional electron gas, in the
fractional quantum Hall regime, to the sudden appearance of a localised charged
probe using the Chern-Simons theory of composite fermions. The dynamic
structure factor of the electron gas is found to have a major influence on the
spectral function of the probe. In particular, there is an orthogonality
catastrophe when the filling factor is an even-denominator filling fraction due
to the compressibility of the state, but there is no catastrophe at
odd-denominator filling factors because these states have a gap to excitations.
The catastrophe is found to be more severe for composite fermions in zero
effective magnetic field than it is for electrons in zero real magnetic field.
Oscillations in the spectral function, arising when the composite fermions are
at integer filling, have a period equal to the composite fermion cyclotron
energy. We propose a tunneling experiment which directly measures the spectral
function from which one could determine the composite fermion effective mass.Comment: 15 pages of REVTEX. Uses multicol package. Twoside option is default.
There are 29 figures in GIF format to save spac
Micro-fluid exchange coupling apparatus
In a macro-fluid exchange, a hollow needle, such as a syringe needle, is provided for penetrating the fluid conduit of the animal. The syringe needle is coupled to a plenum chamber having an inlet and outlet port. The plenum chamber is coupled to the syringe needle via the intermediary of a standard quick disconnect coupling fitting. The plenum chamber is carried at the end of a drive rod which is coupled to a micrometer drive head. The micrometer drive head is slidably and pivotably coupled to a pedestal for adjusting the height and angle of inclination of the needle relative to a reference base support. The needle is positioned adjacent to the incised trachea or a blood vessel of a small animal and the micrometer drive head is operated for penetrating the fluid conduit of the animal
Quantum Hysteresis in Coupled Light-Matter Systems
We investigate the non-equilibrium quantum dynamics of a canonical
light-matter system, namely the Dicke model, when the light-matter interaction
is ramped up and down through a cycle across the quantum phase transition. Our
calculations reveal a rich set of dynamical behaviors determined by the cycle
times, ranging from the slow, near adiabatic regime through to the fast, sudden
quench regime. As the cycle time decreases, we uncover a crossover from an
oscillatory exchange of quantum information between light and matter that
approaches a reversible adiabatic process, to a dispersive regime that
generates large values of light-matter entanglement. The phenomena uncovered in
this work have implications in quantum control, quantum interferometry, as well
as in quantum information theory.Comment: 9 pages and 4 figure
Functional advantages offered by many-body coherences in biochemical systems
Quantum coherence phenomena driven by electronic-vibrational (vibronic)
interactions, are being reported in many pulse (e.g. laser) driven chemical and
biophysical systems. But what systems-level advantage(s) do such many-body
coherences offer to future technologies? We address this question for pulsed
systems of general size N, akin to the LHCII aggregates found in green plants.
We show that external pulses generate vibronic states containing particular
multipartite entanglements, and that such collective vibronic states increase
the excitonic transfer efficiency. The strength of these many-body coherences
and their robustness to decoherence, increase with aggregate size N and do not
require strong electronic-vibrational coupling. The implications for energy and
information transport are discussed.Comment: arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1706.0776
Pulsed Generation of Quantum Coherences and Non-classicality in Light-Matter Systems
We show that a pulsed stimulus can be used to generate many-body quantum
coherences in light-matter systems of general size. Specifically, we calculate
the exact real-time evolution of a driven, generic out-of-equilibrium system
comprising an arbitrary number N qubits coupled to a global boson field. A
novel form of dynamically-driven quantum coherence emerges for general N and
without having to access the empirically challenging strong-coupling regime.
Its properties depend on the speed of the changes in the stimulus.
Non-classicalities arise within each subsystem that have eluded previous
analyses. Our findings show robustness to losses and noise, and have potential
functional implications at the systems level for a variety of nanosystems,
including collections of N atoms, molecules, spins, or superconducting qubits
in cavities -- and possibly even vibration-enhanced light harvesting processes
in macromolecules.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figure
Dynamics of Entanglement and the Schmidt Gap in a Driven Light-Matter System
The ability to modify light-matter coupling in time (e.g. using external
pulses) opens up the exciting possibility of generating and probing new aspects
of quantum correlations in many-body light-matter systems. Here we study the
impact of such a pulsed coupling on the light-matter entanglement in the Dicke
model as well as the respective subsystem quantum dynamics. Our dynamical
many-body analysis exploits the natural partition between the radiation and
matter degrees of freedom, allowing us to explore time-dependent
intra-subsystem quantum correlations by means of squeezing parameters, and the
inter-subsystem Schmidt gap for different pulse duration (i.e. ramping
velocity) regimes -- from the near adiabatic to the sudden quench limits. Our
results reveal that both types of quantities indicate the emergence of the
superradiant phase when crossing the quantum critical point. In addition, at
the end of the pulse light and matter remain entangled even though they become
uncoupled, which could be exploited to generate entangled states in
non-interacting systems.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figures, Accepted for publication in Journal of Physics
B, special issue Correlations in light-matter interaction
Integrated payload and mission planning, phase 3. Volume 2: Logic/Methodology for preliminary grouping of spacelab and mixed cargo payloads
The logic and methodology for a preliminary grouping of Spacelab and mixed-cargo payloads is proposed in a form that can be readily coded into a computer program by NASA. The logic developed for this preliminary cargo grouping analysis is summarized. Principal input data include the NASA Payload Model, payload descriptive data, Orbiter and Spacelab capabilities, and NASA guidelines and constraints. The first step in the process is a launch interval selection in which the time interval for payload grouping is identified. Logic flow steps are then taken to group payloads and define flight configurations based on criteria that includes dedication, volume, area, orbital parameters, pointing, g-level, mass, center of gravity, energy, power, and crew time
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