148 research outputs found

    Dephasing-assisted transport: quantum networks and biomolecules

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    Original article can be found at: http://www.iop.org/EJ/journal/1367-2630/1 DOI: 10.1088/1367-2630/10/11/113019Transport phenomena are fundamental in physics. They allow for information and energy to be exchanged between individual constituents of communication systems, networks or even biological entities. Environmental noise will generally hinder the efficiency of the transport process. However, and contrary to intuition, there are situations in classical systems where thermal fluctuations are actually instrumental in assisting transport phenomena. Here we show that, even at zero temperature, transport of excitations across dissipative quantum networks can be enhanced by local dephasing noise. We explain the underlying physical mechanisms behind this phenomenon and propose possible experimental demonstrations in quantum optics. Our results suggest that the presence of entanglement does not play an essential role for energy transport and may even hinder it. We argue that Nature may be routinely exploiting dephasing noise and show that the transport of excitations in simplified models of light harvesting molecules does benefit from such noise assisted processes. These results point toward the possibility for designing optimized structures for transport, for example in artificial nanostructures, assisted by noise.Peer reviewe

    Robust creation of entanglement between ions in spatially separate cavities

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    We present a protocol that allows the generation of a maximally entangled state between individual atoms held in spatially separate cavities. Assuming perfect detectors and neglecting spontaneous emission from the atoms, the resulting idealized scheme is deterministic. Under more realistic conditions, when the atom-cavity interaction departs from the strong coupling regime, and considering imperfect detectors, we show that the scheme is robust against experimental inefficiencies and yields probabilistic entanglement of very high fidelity

    Quantum Effects in Biology and Their Applications to Light Harvesting and Sensing

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    AbstractThis session introduced the novel area of quantum effects in biological systems: it presented its seminal experimental discoveries and theoretical ideas, namely regarding photosynthetic systems and olfactory recognition, and discussed their potential applications to the development of artificial devices for more efficient light harvesting and finer sensing

    Noise-assisted preparation of entangled atoms

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    We discuss the generation of entangled states of two two-level atoms inside an optical cavity. The cavity mode is supposed to be coupled to a white noise with adjustable intensity. We describe how the entanglement between the atoms inside the cavity arise in such a situation. The entanglement is maximized for intermediate values of the noise intensity, while it is a monotonic function of the spontaneous rate. This resembles the phenomenon of stochastic resonance and sheds more light on the idea to exploit white noise in quantum information processing.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure

    Symmetric qubits from cavity states

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    Two-mode cavities can be prepared in quantum states which represent symmetric multi-qubit states. However, the qubits are impossible to address individually and as such cannot be independently measured or otherwise manipulated. We propose two related schemes to coherently transfer the qubits which the cavity state represents onto individual atoms, so that the qubits can then be processed individually. In particular, our scheme can be combined with the quantum cloning scheme of Simon and coworkers [C. Simon et al, PRL 84, 2993 (2000)] to allow the optimal clones which their scheme produces to be spatially separated and individually utilized.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, minor typographical errors correcte

    Is entanglement entropy proportional to area?

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    It is known that the entanglement entropy of a scalar field, found by tracing over its degrees of freedom inside a sphere of radius R{\cal R}, is proportional to the area of the sphere (and not its volume). This suggests that the origin of black hole entropy, also proportional to its horizon area, may lie in the entanglement between the degrees of freedom inside and outside the horizon. We examine this proposal carefully by including excited states, to check probable deviations from the area law.Comment: 6 pages. Based on talk by S. Das at Theory Canada 1, Vancouver, 3 June, 2005. To be published in a special edition of the Canadian Journal of Physics. Minor changes to match published versio

    Ordering states with entanglement measures

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    We demonstrate that all good asymptotic entanglement measures are either identical or place a different ordering on the set of all quantum states.Comment: 6 pages, minor changes, references updated, all conclusions unchanged, now accepted for publicatio

    Optical Bell measurement by Fock filtering

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    We describe a nonlinear interferometric setup to perform a complete optical Bell measurement, i.e. to unambigously discriminate the four polarization entangled EPR-Bell photon pairs. The scheme is robust against detector inefficiency

    On a gap in the proof of the generalised quantum Stein's lemma and its consequences for the reversibility of quantum resources

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    We show that the proof of the generalised quantum Stein's lemma [Brandão & Plenio, Commun. Math. Phys. 295, 791 (2010)] is not correct due to a gap in the argument leading to Lemma III.9. Hence, the main achievability result of Brandão & Plenio is not known to hold. This puts into question a number of established results in the literature, in particular the reversibility of quantum entanglement [Brandão & Plenio, Commun. Math. Phys. 295, 829 (2010); Nat. Phys. 4, 873 (2008)] and of general quantum resources [Brandão & Gour, Phys. Rev. Lett. 115, 070503 (2015)] under asymptotically resource non-generating operations. We discuss potential ways to recover variants of the newly unsettled results using other approaches

    Improving the precision of frequency estimation via long-time coherences

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    In recent years, several estimation strategies have been formulated to determine the value of an unknown parameter in the most precise way, taking into account the presence of noise. These strategies typically rely on the use of quantum entanglement between the sensing probes and they have been shown to be optimal in the asymptotic limit in the number of probes, as long as one performs measurements on shorter and shorter time scales. Here, we present a different approach to frequency estimation, which exploits quantum coherence in the state of each sensing particle in the long time limit and is obtained by properly engineering the environment. By means of a commonly used master equation, we show that our strategy can overcome the precision achievable with entanglement-based strategies for a finite number of probes. We discuss a possible implementation of the scheme in a realistic setup that uses trapped ions as quantum sensors
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