827 research outputs found
High Q-factor Sapphire Whispering Gallery Mode Microwave Resonator at Single Photon Energies and milli-Kelvin Temperatures
The microwave properties of a crystalline sapphire dielectric whispering
gallery mode resonator have been measured at very low excitation strength
(E/hf=1) and low temperatures (T = 30 mK). The measurements were sensitive
enough to observe saturation due to a highly detuned electron spin resonance,
which limited the loss tangent of the material to about 2e-8 measured at 13.868
and 13.259 GHz. Small power dependent frequency shifts were also measured which
correspond to an added magnetic susceptibility of order 1e-9. This work shows
that quantum limited microwave resonators with Q-factors > 1e8 are possible
with the implementation of a sapphire whispering gallery mode system
The Sunyaev-Zeldovich Effect at 1 and 2 mm towards ROSAT Clusters
An observing campaign was devoted to the search for the Sunyaev-Zeldovich
(S-Z) effect towards X-ray ROSAT Clusters in the millimetric spectral domain. A
double channel (1.2 and 2 {\it mm}) photometer was installed at the focus of
the 15m Swedish ESO Submillimeter Telescope (SEST) in Chile in september 1994
and 1995 and observations of the targets S1077, A2744, S295 and RXJ0658-5557
were gathered. Detections were found for A2744 at 1 {\it mm} and in both
channels (at 1.2 and 2 {\it mm}) towards RXJ0658-5557. For the first time there
is evidence for the S-Z enhancement and both the latter and the decrement were
detected on the same source. We discuss astrophysical and systematic effects
which could give origin to these signals.Comment: 6 pg Latex file (style file included) including 1 ps figure, XVIth
Moriond Astrophysics Meeting "The Anisotropies of the Cosmic Microwave
Background", Les Arcs, Savoie-France, March 16-23 199
Magnetism in SQUIDs at Millikelvin Temperatures
We have characterized the temperature dependence of the flux threading dc
SQUIDs cooled to millikelvin temperatures. The flux increases as 1/T as
temperature is lowered; moreover, the flux change is proportional to the
density of trapped vortices. The data is compatible with the thermal
polarization of surface spins in the trapped fields of the vortices. In the
absence of trapped flux, we observe evidence of spin-glass freezing at low
temperature. These results suggest an explanation for the "universal" 1/f flux
noise in SQUIDs and superconducting qubits.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Compressed sensing quantum process tomography for superconducting quantum gates
We apply the method of compressed sensing (CS) quantum process tomography
(QPT) to characterize quantum gates based on superconducting Xmon and phase
qubits. Using experimental data for a two-qubit controlled-Z gate, we obtain an
estimate for the process matrix with reasonably high fidelity compared
to full QPT, but using a significantly reduced set of initial states and
measurement configurations. We show that the CS method still works when the
amount of used data is so small that the standard QPT would have an
underdetermined system of equations. We also apply the CS method to the
analysis of the three-qubit Toffoli gate with numerically added noise, and
similarly show that the method works well for a substantially reduced set of
data. For the CS calculations we use two different bases in which the process
matrix is approximately sparse, and show that the resulting estimates of
the process matrices match each ther with reasonably high fidelity. For both
two-qubit and three-qubit gates, we characterize the quantum process by not
only its process matrix and fidelity, but also by the corresponding standard
deviation, defined via variation of the state fidelity for different initial
states.Comment: 16 pages, 11 figure
Coherent photon assisted cotunneling in a Coulomb blockade device
We study cotunneling in a double junction Coulomb blockade device under the
influence of time dependent potentials. It is shown that the ac-bias leads to
photon assisted cotunneling which in some cases may dominate the transport. We
derive a general non-perturbative expression for the tunneling current in the
presence of oscillating potentials and give a perturbative expression for the
photon assisted cotunneling current.Comment: Replaced with a longer paper which includes a non-perturbative
calculation. 13 pages with 1 figure. To be published in Physical Review
Giant oscillations of the current in a dirty 2D electron system flowing perpendicular to a lateral barrier under magnetic field
The charge transport in a dirty 2-dimensional electron system biased in the
presence of a lateral potential barrier under magnetic field is theoretically
studied. The quantum tunneling across the barrier provides the quantum
interference of the edge states localized on its both sides that results in
giant oscillations of the charge current flowing perpendicular to the lateral
junction. Our theoretical analysis is in a good agreement with the experimental
observations presented in Ref.8. In particular, positions of the conductance
maxima coincide with the Landau levels while the conductance itself is
essentially suppressed even at the energies at which the resonant tunneling
occurs and hence these puzzling observations can be resolved without taking
into account the electron-electron interaction.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
A nighttime temperature maximum in the thermosphere above Saint Santin in winter
International audienceThe Saint Santin (45 N) incoherent scatter radar data base shows a local enhancement in nighttime ion temperature that occurs in winter only. Its amplitude can exceed 100 K and averages 40 K on the basis of a conservative computation. The enhancement peaks near 4 LT and has a duration of about 4 hours. We discuss two possible explanations for this feature: (1) it is caused by the convergence of global winds at the global pressure minimum, under which Saint Santin rotates at winter solstice, and (2) it is an extension or propagation of the well-known low-latitude midnight temperature maximum to midlatitudes, perhaps to that pressure minimum
Analysis of measurement errors for a superconducting phase qubit
We analyze several mechanisms leading to errors in a course of measurement of
a superconducting flux-biased phase qubit. Insufficiently long measurement
pulse may lead to nonadiabatic transitions between qubit states and
, before tunneling through a reduced barrier is supposed to distinguish
the qubit states. Finite (though large) ratio of tunneling rates for these
states leads to incomplete discrimination between and .
Insufficiently fast energy relaxation after the tunneling of state may
cause the repopulation of the quantum well in which only the state is
supposed to remain. We analyze these types of measurement errors using
analytical approaches as well as numerical solution of the time-dependent
Schr\"{o}dinger equation.Comment: 14 pages, 14 figure
Demonstration of quantum Zeno effect in a superconducting phase qubit
Quantum Zeno effect is a significant tool in quantum manipulating and
computing. We propose its observation in superconducting phase qubit with two
experimentally feasible measurement schemes. The conventional measurement
method is used to achieve the proposed pulse and continuous readout of the
qubit state, which are analyzed by projection assumption and Monte Carlo
wave-function simulation, respectively. Our scheme gives a direct
implementation of quantum Zeno effect in a superconducting phase qubit.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
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