22,416 research outputs found
Measuring molecular electric dipoles using trapped atomic ions and ultrafast laser pulses
We study a hybrid quantum system composed of an ion and an electric dipole.
We show how a trapped ion can be used to measure the small electric field
generated by a classical dipole. We discuss the application of this scheme to
measure the electric dipole moment of cold polar molecules, whose internal
state can be controlled with ultrafast laser pulses, by trapping them in the
vicinity of a trapped ion.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figures. Substantially modified version, with 4 new
appendices; matches published versio
Collective modes of a trapped ion-dipole system
We study a simple model consisting of an atomic ion and a polar molecule
trapped in a single setup, taking into consideration their electrostatic
interaction. We determine analytically their collective modes of excitation as
a function of their masses, trapping frequencies, distance, and the molecule's
electric dipole moment. We then discuss the application of these collective
excitations to cool molecules, to entangle molecules and ions, and to realize
two-qubit gates between them. We finally present a numerical analysis of the
possibility of applying these tools to study magnetically ordered phases of
two-dimensional arrays of polar molecules, a setup proposed to quantum-simulate
some strongly-correlated models of condensed matter.Comment: v2: 13 pages, 8 figures (from 10 figure files). Matches published
version in Appl. Phys. B, special issue "Wolfgang Paul 100
Hybrid quantum magnetism in circuit-QED: from spin-photon waves to many-body spectroscopy
We introduce a model of quantum magnetism induced by the non-perturbative
exchange of microwave photons between distant superconducting qubits. By
interconnecting qubits and cavities, we obtain a spin-boson lattice model that
exhibits a quantum phase transition where both qubits and cavities
spontaneously polarise. We present a many-body ansatz that captures this
phenomenon all the way, from a the perturbative dispersive regime where photons
can be traced out, to the non-perturbative ultra-strong coupling regime where
photons must be treated on the same footing as qubits. Our ansatz also
reproduces the low-energy excitations, which are described by hybridised
spin-photon quasiparticles, and can be probed spectroscopically from
transmission experiments in circuit-QED, as shown by simulating a possible
experiment by Matrix-Product-State methods.Comment: closer to published versio
Continuous matrix product states for coupled fields: Application to Luttinger Liquids and quantum simulators
A way of constructing continuous matrix product states (cMPS) for coupled
fields is presented here. The cMPS is a variational \emph{ansatz} for the
ground state of quantum field theories in one dimension. Our proposed scheme is
based in the physical interpretation in which the cMPS class can be produced by
means of a dissipative dynamic of a system interacting with a bath. We study
the case of coupled bosonic fields. We test the method with previous DMRG
results in coupled Lieb Liniger models. Besides, we discuss a novel application
for characterizing the Luttinger liquid theory emerging in the low energy
regime of these theories. Finally, we propose a circuit QED architecture as a
quantum simulator for coupled fields.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figure
Publishing performance in economics: Spanish rankings (1990-1999)
This paper contributes to the growing literature that analyses the Spanish publishing performance in Economics throughout the 1990s. Several bibliometric indicators are used in order to provide Spanish rankings (of both institutions and individual authors) based on Econlit journals. Further, lists of the ten most influential authors and articles over that period, in terms of citations, are reported.Publicad
Quantum Ratchets for Quantum Communication with Optical Superlattices
We propose to use a quantum ratchet to transport quantum information in a
chain of atoms trapped in an optical superlattice. The quantum ratchet is
created by a continuous modulation of the optical superlattice which is
periodic in time and in space. Though there is zero average force acting on the
atoms, we show that indeed the ratchet effect permits atoms on even and odd
sites to move along opposite directions. By loading the optical lattice with
two-level bosonic atoms, this scheme permits to perfectly transport a qubit or
entangled state imprinted in one or more atoms to any desired position in the
lattice. From the quantum computation point of view, the transport is achieved
by a smooth concatenation of perfect swap gates. We analyze setups with
noninteracting and interacting particles and in the latter case we use the
tools of optimal control to design optimal modulations. We also discuss the
feasibility of this method in current experiments.Comment: Published version, 9 pages, 5 figure
Phase Stabilization of a Frequency Comb using Multipulse Quantum Interferometry
From the interaction between a frequency comb and an atomic qubit, we derive
quantum protocols for the determination of the carrier-envelope offset phase,
using the qubit coherence as a reference, and without the need of frequency
doubling or an octave spanning comb. Compared with a trivial interference
protocol, the multipulse protocol results in a polynomial enhancement of the
sensitivity O(N^{-2}) with the number N of laser pulses involved. We present
specializations of the protocols using optical or hyperfine qubits,
Lambda-schemes and Raman transitions, and introduce methods where the reference
is another phase-stable cw-laser or frequency comb
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