684 research outputs found
Direct measurement of the quantum state of the electromagnetic field in a superconducting transmission line
We propose an experimental procedure to directly measure the state of an
electromagnetic field inside a resonator, corresponding to a superconducting
transmission line, coupled to a Cooper-pair box (CPB). The measurement protocol
is based on the use of a dispersive interaction between the field and the CPB,
and the coupling to an external classical field that is tuned to resonance with
either the field or the CPB. We present a numerical simulation that
demonstrates the feasibility of this protocol, which is within reach of present
technology.Comment: Accepted for publication in Physical Review A (Rapid Communication).
4 pages, 2 figure
Quantum to classical transition in a system with a mixed classical dynamics
We study how decoherence rules the quantum-classical transition of the Kicked
Harmonic Oscillator (KHO). When the amplitude of the kick is changed the system
presents a classical dynamics that range from regular to a strong chaotic
behavior. We show that for regular and mixed classical dynamics, and in the
presence of noise, the distance between the classical and the quantum phase
space distributions is proportional to a single parameter which relates the effective Planck constant
, the kick amplitude and the diffusion constant . This
is valid when , a case that is always attainable in the semiclassical
regime independently of the value of the strength of noise given by . Our
results extend a recent study performed in the chaotic regime.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figure
Decoherence, pointer engineering and quantum state protection
We present a proposal for protecting states against decoherence, based on the
engineering of pointer states. We apply this procedure to the vibrational
motion of a trapped ion, and show how to protect qubits, squeezed states,
approximate phase eigenstates and superpositions of coherent states.Comment: 1 figur
Interferometric sensing of the tilt angle of a Gaussian beam
We investigate interferometric techniques to estimate the deflection angle of
an optical beam and compare them to the direct detection of the beam
deflection. We show that quantum metrology methods lead to a unifying treatment
for both single photons and classical fields. Using the Fisher information to
assess the precision limits of the interferometric schemes, we show that the
precision can be increased by exploiting the initial transverse displacement of
the beam. This gain, which is present for both Sagnac and Mach-Zehnder-like
configurations, can be considerable when compared to non-interferometric
methods. In addition to the fundamental increase in precision, the
interferometric schemes have the technical advantage that (i) the precision
limits can be saturated by a sole polarization measurement on the field, and
that (ii) the detection system can be placed at any longitudinal position along
the beam. We also consider position-dependent polarization measurements, and
show that in this case the precision increases with the propagation distance,
as well as the initial transverse displacement.Comment: Comments are welcom
Quantum Non-Demolition Test of Bipartite Complementarity
We present a quantum circuit that implements a non-demolition measurement of
complementary single- and bi-partite properties of a two-qubit system:
entanglement and single-partite visibility and predictability. The system must
be in a pure state with real coefficients in the computational basis, which
allows a direct operational interpretation of those properties. The circuit can
be realized in many systems of interest to quantum information.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Scaling laws for the decay of multiqubit entanglement
We investigate the decay of entanglement of generalized N-particle
Greenberger-Horne-Zeilinger (GHZ) states interacting with independent
reservoirs. Scaling laws for the decay of entanglement and for its finite-time
extinction (sudden death) are derived for different types of reservoirs. The
latter is found to increase with the number of particles. However, entanglement
becomes arbitrarily small, and therefore useless as a resource, much before it
completely disappears, around a time which is inversely proportional to the
number of particles. We also show that the decay of multi-particle GHZ states
can generate bound entangled states.Comment: Minor mistakes correcte
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