3,932 research outputs found
Schemes of implementation in NMR of quantum processors and Deutsch-Jozsa algorithm by using virtual spin representation
Schemes of experimental realization of the main two qubit processors for
quantum computers and Deutsch-Jozsa algorithm are derived in virtual spin
representation. The results are applicable for every four quantum states
allowing the required properties for quantum processor implementation if for
qubit encoding virtual spin representation is used. Four dimensional Hilbert
space of nuclear spin 3/2 is considered in details for this aimComment: 15 pages, 3 figure
Three-Qubit Gate Realization Using Single Quantum Particle
Using virtual spin formalism it is shown that a quantum particle with eight
energy levels can store three qubits. The formalism allows to realize a
universal set of quantum gates. Feasible formalism implementation is suggested
which uses nuclear spin-7/2 as a storage medium and radio frequency pulses as
the gates. One pulse realization of all universal gates has been found,
including three-qubit Toffoli gate.Comment: LaTeX, 6 pages, no figures; Submitted to "Pis'ma v Zh. Eksp. Teor.
Fiz.
Quantum storage on subradiant states in an extended atomic ensemble
A scheme for coherent manipulation of collective atomic states is developed
such that total subradiant states, in which spontaneous emission is suppressed
into all directions due to destructive interference between neighbor atoms, can
be created in an extended atomic ensemble. The optimal conditions for creation
of such states and suitability of them for quantum storage are discussed. It is
shown that in order to achieve the maximum signal-to-noise ratio the shape of a
light pulse to be stored and reconstructed using a homogeneously broadened
absorbtion line of an atomic system should be a time-reversed regular part of
the response function of the system. In the limit of high optical density, such
pulses allow one to prepare collective subradiant atomic states with near flat
spatial distribution of the atomic excitation in the medium.Comment: V2: considerably revised (title, text). V3: minor changes - final
version as published in PR
Coherent control of collective spontaneous emission in an extended atomic ensemble and quantum storage
Coherent control of collective spontaneous emission in an extended atomic
ensemble resonantly interacting with single-photon wave packets is analyzed. A
scheme for coherent manipulation of collective atomic states is developed such
that superradiant states of the atomic system can be converted into subradiant
ones and vice versa. Possible applications of such a scheme for optical quantum
state storage and single-photon wave packet shaping are discussed. It is shown
that also in the absence of inhomogeneous broadening of the resonant line,
single-photon wave packets with arbitrary pulse shape may be recorded as a
subradiant state and reconstructed even although the duration of the wave
packets is larger than the superradiant life-time. Specifically the
applicability for storing time-bin qubits, which are used in quantum
cryptography is analyzed.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures, submitted to PR
Estimating annual soil carbon loss in agricultural peatland soils using a nitrogen budget approach.
Around the world, peatland degradation and soil subsidence is occurring where these soils have been converted to agriculture. Since initial drainage in the mid-1800s, continuous farming of such soils in the California Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta (the Delta) has led to subsidence of up to 8 meters in places, primarily due to soil organic matter (SOM) oxidation and physical compaction. Rice (Oryza sativa) production has been proposed as an alternative cropping system to limit SOM oxidation. Preliminary research on these soils revealed high N uptake by rice in N fertilizer omission plots, which we hypothesized was the result of SOM oxidation releasing N. Testing this hypothesis, we developed a novel N budgeting approach to assess annual soil C and N loss based on plant N uptake and fallow season N mineralization. Through field experiments examining N dynamics during growing season and winter fallow periods, a complete annual N budget was developed. Soil C loss was calculated from SOM-N mineralization using the soil C:N ratio. Surface water and crop residue were negligible in the total N uptake budget (3 - 4 % combined). Shallow groundwater contributed 24 - 33 %, likely representing subsurface SOM-N mineralization. Assuming 6 and 25 kg N ha-1 from atmospheric deposition and biological N2 fixation, respectively, our results suggest 77 - 81 % of plant N uptake (129 - 149 kg N ha-1) was supplied by SOM mineralization. Considering a range of N uptake efficiency from 50 - 70 %, estimated net C loss ranged from 1149 - 2473 kg C ha-1. These findings suggest that rice systems, as currently managed, reduce the rate of C loss from organic delta soils relative to other agricultural practices
Particle acceleration due to shocks in the interplanetary field: High time resolution data and simulation results
Data were examined from two experiments aboard the Explorer 50 (IMP 8) spacecraft. The Johns Hopkins University/Applied Lab Charged Particle Measurement Experiment (CPME) provides 10.12 second resolution ion and electron count rates as well as 5.5 minute or longer averages of the same, with data sampled in the ecliptic plane. The high time resolution of the data allows for an explicit, point by point, merging of the magnetic field and particle data and thus a close examination of the pre- and post-shock conditions and particle fluxes associated with large angle oblique shocks in the interplanetary field. A computer simulation has been developed wherein sample particle trajectories, taken from observed fluxes, are allowed to interact with a planar shock either forward or backward in time. One event, the 1974 Day 312 shock, is examined in detail
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