4,555 research outputs found
Nuclear spin qubits in a trapped-ion quantum computer
Physical systems must fulfill a number of conditions to qualify as useful
quantum bits (qubits) for quantum information processing, including ease of
manipulation, long decoherence times, and high fidelity readout operations.
Since these conditions are hard to satisfy with a single system, it may be
necessary to combine different degrees of freedom. Here we discuss a possible
system, based on electronic and nuclear spin degrees of freedom in trapped
ions. The nuclear spin yields long decoherence times, while the electronic
spin, in a magnetic field gradient, provides efficient manipulation, and the
optical transitions of the ions assure a selective and efficient initialization
and readout.Comment: 7 page
Separation of quadrupolar and magnetic contributions to spin-lattice relaxation in the case of a single isotope
We present a NMR pulse double-irradiation method which allows one to separate
magnetic from quadrupolar contributions in the spin-lattice relaxation. The
pulse sequence fully saturates one transition while another is observed. In the
presence of a Delta m = 2 quadrupolar contribution, the intensity of the
observed line is altered compared to a standard spin-echo experiment. We
calculated analytically this intensity change for spins I=1, 3/2, 5/2, thus
providing a quantitative analysis of the experimental results. Since the pulse
sequence we used takes care of the absorbed radio-frequency power, no problems
due to heating arise. The method is especially suited when only one NMR
sensitive isotope is available. Different cross-checks were performed to prove
the reliability of the obtained results. The applicability of this method is
demonstrated by a study of the plane oxygen 17O (I = 5/2) in the
high-temperature superconductor YBa_2Cu_4O_8: the 17O spin-lattice relaxation
rate consists of magnetic as well as quadrupolar contributions.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figure
Experimental generation of pseudo bound entanglement
We use Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) to experimentally generate a bound
entangled (more precisely: pseudo bound entangled) state, i.e. a quantum state
which is non-distillable but nevertheless entangled. Our quantum system
consists of three qubits. We characterize the produced state via state
tomography to show that the created state has a positive partial transposition
with respect to any bipartite splitting, and we use a witness operator to prove
its entanglement.Comment: 5 page
Experimental implementation of encoded logical qubit operations in a perfect quantum error correcting code
Large-scale universal quantum computing requires the implementation of
quantum error correction (QEC). While the implementation of QEC has already
been demonstrated for quantum memories, reliable quantum computing requires
also the application of nontrivial logical gate operations to the encoded
qubits. Here, we present examples of such operations by implementing, in
addition to the identity operation, the NOT and the Hadamard gate to a logical
qubit encoded in a five qubit system that allows correction of arbitrary single
qubit errors. We perform quantum process tomography of the encoded gate
operations, demonstrate the successful correction of all possible single qubit
errors and measure the fidelity of the encoded logical gate operations
Nuclear spin-lattice relaxation in p-type GaAs
Spin-lattice relaxation of the nuclear spin system in p-type GaAs is studied
using a three-stage experimental protocol including optical pumping and
measuring the difference of the nuclear spin polarization before and after a
dark interval of variable length. This method allows us to measure the
spin-lattice relaxation time of optically pumped nuclei "in the dark",
that is, in the absence of illumination. The measured values fall into
the sub-second time range, being three orders of magnitude shorter than in
earlier studied n-type GaAs. The drastic difference is further emphasized by
magnetic-field and temperature dependences of in p-GaAs, showing no
similarity to those in n-GaAs. This unexpected behavior is explained within a
developed theoretical model involving quadrupole relaxation of nuclear spins,
which is induced by electric fields within closely spaced donor-acceptor pairs.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figure
I.V. LABETALOL IN THE TREATMENT OF HYPERTENSION FOLLOWING CORONARY-ARTERY SURGERY
SUMMARY The cardiovascular effects of incremental fixed i.v. doses of labetalol were evaluated in 10 normovolaemic sedated patients presenting with hypertension and tachycardia in the early period after myocardial revas-cularizaoon. A first dose of 20 mg was sufficient to provoke a (P < 0.01) mean decrease in systolic (−9.3%), diastolic (−8.2%) and mean arterial (−7.9%) pressure (AP) and in the rate-pressure product (RPP) (−13.1%). The mean heart rate (HR) did not change significantly, but a linear correlation could be established between the change at 2 min and the value before injection (r = 0.73). A second dose of labetalol 40 mg given S min later did not decrease AP further, but a significant decrease in HR was noted. A marked difference in the individual response among patients was found as the range of effective total doses per kg body weight was 0.6-4.1 mg kg−1 (mean 2.2). Apart from one patient, no patient needed vagolytic or sympathomimetic drugs to oppose the alpha or beta actions of labetalol during the 24-h follow-up perio
Selective addressing of high-rank atomic polarization moments
We describe a method of selective generation and study of polarization
moments of up to the highest rank possible for a quantum state with
total angular momentum . The technique is based on nonlinear magneto-optical
rotation with frequency-modulated light. Various polarization moments are
distinguished by the periodicity of light-polarization rotation induced by the
atoms during Larmor precession and exhibit distinct light-intensity and
frequency dependences. We apply the method to study polarization moments of
Rb atoms contained in a vapor cell with antirelaxation coating. Distinct
ultra-narrow (1-Hz wide) resonances, corresponding to different multipoles,
appear in the magnetic-field dependence of the optical rotation. The use of the
highest-multipole resonances has important applications in quantum and
nonlinear optics and in magnetometry.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figure
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