873 research outputs found
Electromechanical Quantum Simulators
Digital quantum simulators are among the most appealing applications of a
quantum computer. Here we propose a universal, scalable, and integrated quantum
computing platform based on tunable nonlinear electromechanical
nano-oscillators. It is shown that very high operational fidelities for single
and two qubits gates can be achieved in a minimal architecture, where qubits
are encoded in the anharmonic vibrational modes of mechanical nanoresonators,
whose effective coupling is mediated by virtual fluctuations of an intermediate
superconducting artificial atom. An effective scheme to induce large
single-phonon nonlinearities in nano-electromechanical devices is explicitly
discussed, thus opening the route to experimental investigation in this
direction. Finally, we explicitly show the very high fidelities that can be
reached for the digital quantum simulation of model Hamiltonians, by using
realistic experimental parameters in state-of-the art devices, and considering
the transverse field Ising model as a paradigmatic example.Comment: 14 pages, 8 figure
Parametric Amplification and Back-Action Noise Squeezing by a Qubit-Coupled Nanoresonator
We demonstrate the parametric amplification and noise squeezing of nanomechanical motion utilizing dispersive coupling
to a Cooper-pair box qubit. By modulating the qubit bias and resulting mechanical resonance shift, we achieve gain of 30 dB and
noise squeezing of 4 dB. This qubit-mediated effect is 3000 times more effective than that resulting from the weak nonlinearity of
capacitance to a nearby electrode. This technique may be used to prepare nanomechanical squeezed states
Tuning the structural and dynamical properties of a dipolar Bose-Einstein condensate: Ripples and instability islands
It is now well established that the stability of aligned dipolar Bose gases
can be tuned by varying the aspect ratio of the external harmonic confinement.
This paper extends this idea and demonstrates that a Gaussian barrier along the
strong confinement direction can be employed to tune both the structural
properties and the dynamical stability of an oblate dipolar Bose gas aligned
along the strong confinement direction. In particular, our theoretical
mean-field analysis predicts the existence of instability islands immersed in
otherwise stable regions of the phase diagram. Dynamical studies indicate that
these instability islands, which can be probed experimentally with present-day
technology, are associated with the going soft of a Bogoliubov--de Gennes
excitation frequency with radial breathing mode character. Furthermore, we find
dynamically stable ground state densities with ripple-like oscillations along
the radial direction. These structured ground states exist in the vicinity of a
dynamical radial roton-like instability.Comment: 9 pages, 11 figure
Variability of cell wall polysaccharides composition and hemicellulose enzymatic profile in an apple progeny
The genetic variability of apple cell walls polysaccharides chemical composition and structure was assessed in a progeny of 141 individuals harvested over 2 years. The variability of the hemicelluloses oligosaccharides released by glucanase was analyzed by MALDI-TOF MS. The genetic contribution was distinguished from harvest year as well as from parental crossing patterns and scab resistance selection. Results showed that harvest year had a major impact on cell wall polysaccharide composition and structure. Within each harvest, genetic effect impact more significantly cell wall polysaccharide chemistry than does reciprocal crossing or early scab selection. Uronic acids, glucose, galactose and xylose contents as well as some glucomannan and xyloglucan structures have a high heritability. This first cell wall chemotyping of an apple progeny opens the way for future searches of genetic markers for the chemical variability of cell wall polysaccharides
Quantum simulation of the Anderson Hamiltonian with an array of coupled nanoresonators: delocalization and thermalization effects
The possibility of using nanoelectromechanical systems as a simulation tool
for quantum many-body effects is explored. It is demonstrated that an array of
electrostatically coupled nanoresonators can effectively simulate the
Bose-Hubbard model without interactions, corresponding in the single-phonon
regime to the Anderson tight-binding model. Employing a density matrix
formalism for the system coupled to a bosonic thermal bath, we study the
interplay between disorder and thermalization, focusing on the delocalization
process. It is found that the phonon population remains localized for a long
time at low enough temperatures; with increasing temperatures the localization
is rapidly lost due to thermal pumping of excitations into the array, producing
in the equilibrium a fully thermalized system. Finally, we consider a possible
experimental design to measure the phonon population in the array by means of a
superconducting transmon qubit coupled to individual nanoresonators. We also
consider the possibility of using the proposed quantum simulator for realizing
continuous-time quantum walks.Comment: Replaced with new improved version. To appear in EPJ Q
- …