5,651 research outputs found
Paramagnetic Materials and Practical Algorithmic Cooling for NMR Quantum Computing
Algorithmic Cooling is a method that uses novel data compression techniques
and simplecquantum computing devices to improve NMR spectroscopy, and to offer
scalable NMR quantum computers. The algorithm recursively employs two steps. A
reversible entropy compression of the computation quantum-bits (qubits) of the
system and an irreversible heat transfer from the system to the environment
through a set of reset qubits that reach thermal relaxation rapidly.
Is it possible to experimentally demonstrate algorithmic cooling using
existing technology? To allow experimental algorithmic cooling, the
thermalization time of the reset qubits must be much shorter than the
thermalization time of the computation qubits. However such
thermalization-times ratios have yet to be reported.
We investigate here the effect of a paramagnetic salt on the
thermalization-times ratio of computation qubits (carbons) and a reset qubit
(hydrogen). We show that the thermalization-times ratio is improved by
approximately three-fold. Based on this result, an experimental demonstration
of algorithmic cooling by thermalization and magnetic ions is currently
performed by our group and collaborators.Comment: 5 pages, A conference version of this paper appeared in SPIE, volume
5105, pages 185-194 (2003
Algorithmic Cooling of Spins: A Practicable Method for Increasing Polarization
An efficient technique to generate ensembles of spins that are highly
polarized by external magnetic fields is the Holy Grail in Nuclear Magnetic
Resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. Since spin-half nuclei have steady-state
polarization biases that increase inversely with temperature, spins exhibiting
high polarization biases are considered cool, even when their environment is
warm. Existing spin-cooling techniques are highly limited in their efficiency
and usefulness. Algorithmic cooling is a promising new spin-cooling approach
that employs data compression methods in open systems. It reduces the entropy
of spins on long molecules to a point far beyond Shannon's bound on reversible
entropy manipulations (an information-theoretic version of the 2nd Law of
Thermodynamics), thus increasing their polarization. Here we present an
efficient and experimentally feasible algorithmic cooling technique that cools
spins to very low temperatures even on short molecules. This practicable
algorithmic cooling could lead to breakthroughs in high-sensitivity NMR
spectroscopy in the near future, and to the development of scalable NMR quantum
computers in the far future. Moreover, while the cooling algorithm itself is
classical, it uses quantum gates in its implementation, thus representing the
first short-term application of quantum computing devices.Comment: 24 pages (with annexes), 3 figures (PS). This version contains no
major content changes: fixed bibliography & figures, modified
acknowledgement
Optimal Universal Disentangling Machine for Two Qubit Quantum States
We derive the optimal curve satisfied by the reduction factors, in the case
of universal disentangling machine which uses only local operations.
Impossibility of constructing a better disentangling machine, by using
non-local operations, is discussed.Comment: 15 pages, 2 eps figures, 1 section added, 1 eps figure added, minor
corrections, 2 reference numbers correcte
Unextendible Product Bases, Uncompletable Product Bases and Bound Entanglement
We report new results and generalizations of our work on unextendible product
bases (UPB), uncompletable product bases and bound entanglement. We present a
new construction for bound entangled states based on product bases which are
only completable in a locally extended Hilbert space. We introduce a very
useful representation of a product basis, an orthogonality graph. Using this
representation we give a complete characterization of unextendible product
bases for two qutrits. We present several generalizations of UPBs to arbitrary
high dimensions and multipartite systems. We present a sufficient condition for
sets of orthogonal product states to be distinguishable by separable
superoperators. We prove that bound entangled states cannot help increase the
distillable entanglement of a state beyond its regularized entanglement of
formation assisted by bound entanglement.Comment: 24 pages RevTex, 15 figures; appendix removed, several small
corrections, to appear in Comm. Math. Phy
Quantum disentanglers
It is not possible to disentangle a qubit in an unknown state from a
set of (N-1) ancilla qubits prepared in a specific reference state . That
is, it is not possible to {\em perfectly} perform the transformation
. The question is then how well we can do? We consider a number of
different methods of extracting an unknown state from an entangled state formed
from that qubit and a set of ancilla qubits in an known state. Measuring the
whole system is, as expected, the least effective method. We present various
quantum ``devices'' which disentangle the unknown qubit from the set of ancilla
qubits. In particular, we present the optimal universal disentangler which
disentangles the unknown qubit with the fidelity which does not depend on the
state of the qubit, and a probabilistic disentangler which performs the perfect
disentangling transformation, but with a probability less than one.Comment: 8 pages, 1 eps figur
Perfect state transfers by selective quantum interferences within complex spin networks
We present a method that implement directional, perfect state transfers
within a branched spin network by exploiting quantum interferences in the
time-domain. That provides a tool to isolate subsystems from a large and
complex one. Directionality is achieved by interrupting the spin-spin coupled
evolution with periods of free Zeeman evolutions, whose timing is tuned to be
commensurate with the relative phases accrued by specific spin pairs. This
leads to a resonant transfer between the chosen qubits, and to a detuning of
all remaining pathways in the network, using only global manipulations. As the
transfer is perfect when the selected pathway is mediated by 2 or 3 spins,
distant state transfers over complex networks can be achieved by successive
recouplings among specific pairs/triads of spins. These effects are illustrated
with a quantum simulator involving 13C NMR on Leucine's backbone; a six-spin
network.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Finite lifetime eigenfunctions of coupled systems of harmonic oscillators
We find a Hermite-type basis for which the eigenvalue problem associated to
the operator acting on becomes a three-terms recurrence. Here and are two constant
positive definite matrices with no other restriction. Our main result provides
an explicit characterization of the eigenvectors of that lie in the
span of the first four elements of this basis when .Comment: 11 pages, 1 figure. Some typos where corrected in this new versio
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