7,177 research outputs found
Quantum solvability of a general ordered position dependent mass system: Mathews-Lakshmanan oscillator
In position dependent mass (PDM) problems, the quantum dynamics of the
associated systems have been understood well in the literature for particular
orderings. However, no efforts seem to have been made to solve such PDM
problems for general orderings to obtain a global picture. In this connection,
we here consider the general ordered quantum Hamiltonian of an interesting
position dependent mass problem, namely the Mathews-Lakshmanan oscillator, and
try to solve the quantum problem for all possible orderings including Hermitian
and non-Hermitian ones. The other interesting point in our study is that for
all possible orderings, although the Schr\"odinger equation of this
Mathews-Lakshmanan oscillator is uniquely reduced to the associated Legendre
differential equation, their eigenfunctions cannot be represented in terms of
the associated Legendre polynomials with integral degree and order. Rather the
eigenfunctions are represented in terms of associated Legendre polynomials with
non-integral degree and order. We here explore such polynomials and represent
the discrete and continuum states of the system. We also exploit the connection
between associated Legendre polynomials with non-integral degree with other
orthogonal polynomials such as Jacobi and Gegenbauer polynomials.Comment: Submitted for publicatio
Superconducting Qubits Coupled to Nanoelectromechanical Resonators: An Architecture for Solid-State Quantum Information Processing
We describe the design for a scalable, solid-state
quantum-information-processing architecture based on the integration of
GHz-frequency nanomechanical resonators with Josephson tunnel junctions, which
has the potential for demonstrating a variety of single- and multi-qubit
operations critical to quantum computation. The computational qubits are
eigenstates of large-area, current-biased Josephson junctions, manipulated and
measured using strobed external circuitry. Two or more of these phase qubits
are capacitively coupled to a high-quality-factor piezoelectric
nanoelectromechanical disk resonator, which forms the backbone of our
architecture, and which enables coherent coupling of the qubits. The integrated
system is analogous to one or more few-level atoms (the Josephson junction
qubits) in an electromagnetic cavity (the nanomechanical resonator). However,
unlike existing approaches using atoms in electromagnetic cavities, here we can
individually tune the level spacing of the ``atoms'' and control their
``electromagnetic'' interaction strength. We show theoretically that quantum
states prepared in a Josephson junction can be passed to the nanomechanical
resonator and stored there, and then can be passed back to the original
junction or transferred to another with high fidelity. The resonator can also
be used to produce maximally entangled Bell states between a pair of Josephson
junctions. Many such junction-resonator complexes can assembled in a
hub-and-spoke layout, resulting in a large-scale quantum circuit. Our proposed
architecture combines desirable features of both solid-state and cavity quantum
electrodynamics approaches, and could make quantum information processing
possible in a scalable, solid-state environment.Comment: 20 pages, 14 separate low-resolution jpeg figure
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