721 research outputs found
A Search for Rules for International Wheat Surplus Disposal
Before a cooperative plan can be formulated for utilizing the wheat surpluses in underdeveloped countries, there are three points on which the exporting nations will have to agree. They are: (1) uniform terms (rates of interest and repayment, and etc.) for concessional sales; (2) the level of commercial wheat imports, if any, that the underdeveloped countries should be required to maintain; and (3) a basis for determining the quantity of wheat each exporting nation should supply on concessional terms. The general purpose of this study was to attempt to establish a basic rule for determining the level of commercial wheat imports, if any, that the underdeveloped countries should be required to maintain in addition to concessional purchases and to offer a rule and some procedures that the exporting countries might follow in supplying wheat on concessional terms
On the Bragg, Leibfried, and Modified Leibfried Numbers
The Bragg, Leibfried, and modified Leibfried numbers are defined in the
context of a theory of dislocation-mediated melting, and their values are
determined from the properties of the dislocation ensemble at the melting
temperature. The approximate numerical coincidence of the Bragg and modified
Leibfried numbers is explained. The parameter K in the definition of the
modified Leibfried number is shown to be the natural logarithm of the effective
coordination number. Our analysis reveals that the Bragg number can be
considered an elemental constant, in contrast to the Leibfried and modified
Leibfried numbers.Comment: 5 pages, LaTe
Electrostatics of Gapped and Finite Surface Electrodes
We present approximate methods for calculating the three-dimensional electric
potentials of finite surface electrodes including gaps between electrodes, and
estimate the effects of finite electrode thickness and an underlying dielectric
substrate. As an example we optimize a radio-frequency surface-electrode ring
ion trap, and find that each of these factors reduces the trapping secular
frequencies by less than 5% in realistic situations. This small magnitude
validates the usual assumption of neglecting the influences of gaps between
electrodes and finite electrode extent.Comment: 9 pages, 9 figures (minor changes
Discrete Wigner functions and the phase space representation of quantum teleportation
We present a phase space description of the process of quantum teleportation
for a system with an dimensional space of states. For this purpose we
define a discrete Wigner function which is a minor variation of previously
existing ones. This function is useful to represent composite quantum system in
phase space and to analyze situations where entanglement between subsystems is
relevant (dimensionality of the space of states of each subsystem is
arbitrary). We also describe how a direct tomographic measurement of this
Wigner function can be performed.Comment: 8 pages, 1 figure, to appear in Phys Rev
Jaynes-Cummings Models with trapped surface-state electrons in THz cavities
An electron floating on the liquid Helium is proposed to be trapped (by a
micro-electrode set below the liquid Helium) in a high finesse cavity. Two
lowest levels of the vertical motion of the electron acts as a two-level
"atom", which could resonantly interact with the THz cavity. In the Lamb-Dicke
regime, wherein the electron's in-plane activity region is much smaller than
the wavelength of the cavity mode, the famous Jaynes-Cummings model (JCM) could
be realized. By applying an additional external classical laser beam to the
electron, a driven JCM could also be implemented. With such a driven JCM
certain quantum states, e.g., coherent states and the Schrodinger cat states,
of the THz cavity field could be prepared by one-step evolution. The numerical
results show that, for the typical parameters of the cavity and electron on
liquid Helium, a strong coupling between the artificial atom and the THz cavity
could be obtained.Comment: 11 pages, 1 figure
Two-photon interaction between trapped ions and cavity fields
In this paper, we generalize the ordinary two-photon Jaynes-Cummings model
(TPJCM) by considering the atom (or ion) to be trapped in a simple harmonic
well. A typical setup would be an optical cavity containing a single ion in a
Paul trap. Due to the inclusion of atomic vibrational motion, the atom-field
coupling becomes highly nonlinear what brings out quite different behaviors for
the system dynamics when compared to the ordinary TPJCM. In particular, we
derive an effective two-photon Hamiltonian with dependence on the number
operator of the ion's center-of-mass motion. This dependence occurs both in the
cavity induced Stark-shifs and in the ion-field coupling, and its role in the
dynamics is illustrated by showing the time evolution of the probability of
occupation of the electronic levels for simple initial preparations of the
state of the system.Comment: 9 pages, 10 figure
Frenkel-Kontorova model with cold trapped ions
We study analytically and numerically the properties of one-dimensional chain
of cold ions placed in a periodic potential of optical lattice and global
harmonic potential of a trap. In close similarity with the Frenkel-Kontorova
model, a transition from sliding to pinned phase takes place with the increase
of the optical lattice potential for the density of ions incommensurate with
the lattice period. Quantum fluctuations lead to a quantum phase transition and
melting of pinned instanton glass phase at large values of dimensional Planck
constant. The obtained results are also relevant for a Wigner crystal placed in
a periodic potential.Comment: RevTeX, 5 pages, 11 figures, research at
http://www.quantware.ups-tlse.f
Optimal approach to quantum communication using dynamic programming
Reliable preparation of entanglement between distant systems is an
outstanding problem in quantum information science and quantum communication.
In practice, this has to be accomplished via noisy channels (such as optical
fibers) that generally result in exponential attenuation of quantum signals at
large distances. A special class of quantum error correction protocols--quantum
repeater protocols--can be used to overcome such losses. In this work, we
introduce a method for systematically optimizing existing protocols and
developing new, more efficient protocols. Our approach makes use of a dynamic
programming-based searching algorithm, the complexity of which scales only
polynomially with the communication distance, letting us efficiently determine
near-optimal solutions. We find significant improvements in both the speed and
the final state fidelity for preparing long distance entangled states.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figure
A trapped-ion local field probe
We introduce a measurement scheme that utilizes a single ion as a local field
probe. The ion is confined in a segmented Paul trap and shuttled around to
reach different probing sites. By the use of a single atom probe, it becomes
possible characterizing fields with spatial resolution of a few nm within an
extensive region of millimeters. We demonstrate the scheme by accurately
investigating the electric fields providing the confinement for the ion. For
this we present all theoretical and practical methods necessary to generate
these potentials. We find sub-percent agreement between measured and calculated
electric field values
Randomized Benchmarking of Quantum Gates
A key requirement for scalable quantum computing is that elementary quantum
gates can be implemented with sufficiently low error. One method for
determining the error behavior of a gate implementation is to perform process
tomography. However, standard process tomography is limited by errors in state
preparation, measurement and one-qubit gates. It suffers from inefficient
scaling with number of qubits and does not detect adverse error-compounding
when gates are composed in long sequences. An additional problem is due to the
fact that desirable error probabilities for scalable quantum computing are of
the order of 0.0001 or lower. Experimentally proving such low errors is
challenging. We describe a randomized benchmarking method that yields estimates
of the computationally relevant errors without relying on accurate state
preparation and measurement. Since it involves long sequences of randomly
chosen gates, it also verifies that error behavior is stable when used in long
computations. We implemented randomized benchmarking on trapped atomic ion
qubits, establishing a one-qubit error probability per randomized pi/2 pulse of
0.00482(17) in a particular experiment. We expect this error probability to be
readily improved with straightforward technical modifications.Comment: 13 page
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