29 research outputs found
Observable and hidden singular features of large fluctuations in nonequilibrium systems
We study local features, and provide a topological insight into the global
structure of the probability density distribution and of the pattern of the
optimal paths for large rare fluctuations away from a stable state. In contrast
to extremal paths in quantum mechanics, the optimal paths do {\it not}
encounter caustics. We show how this occurs, and what, instead of caustics, are
the experimentally observable singularities of the pattern. We reveal the
possibility for a caustic and a switching line to start at a saddle point, and
discuss the consequences.Comment: 10 pages, 3 ps figures by request, LaTeX Article Format (In press,
Phys. Lett. A
Quantum dynamics of a domain wall in the presence of dephasing
We compare quantum dynamics in the presence of Markovian dephasing for a particle hopping on a chain and for an Ising domain wall whose motion leaves behind a string of flipped spins. Exact solutions show that on an infinite chain, the transport responses of the models are nearly identical. However, on finite-length chains, the broadening of discrete spectral lines is much more noticeable in the case of a domain wall.This work was supported in part by the ARO grant W911NF-14-1-0272, the NSF grant PHY-1416578, and EPSRC grants EP/K028960/1 and EP/M007065/1
Thermally activated switching in the presence of non-Gaussian noise
We study the effect of a non-Gaussian noise on interstate switching activated
primarily by Gaussian noise. Even weak non-Gaussian noise can strongly change
the switching rate. The effect is determined by all moments of the noise
distribution. The explicit analytical results are compared with the results of
simulations for an overdamped system driven by white Gaussian noise and a
Poisson noise. Switching induced by a purely Poisson noise is also discussed.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, unsolicited repor
Ripplonic Lamb Shift for Electrons on Liquid Helium
We study the shift of the energy levels of electrons on helium surface due to
the coupling to the quantum field of surface vibrations. As in quantum
electrodynamics, the coupling is known, and it is known to lead to an
ultraviolet divergence of the level shifts. We show that there are diverging
terms of different nature and use the Bethe-type approach to show that they
cancel each other, to the leading-order. This resolves the long-standing
theoretical controversy and explains the existing experiments. The results
allow us to study the temperature dependence of the level shift. The
predictions are in good agreement with the experimental data
Josephson parametric amplifier with Chebyshev gain profile and high saturation
We demonstrate a Josephson parametric amplifier design with a band-pass
impedance matching network based on a third-order Chebyshev prototype. We
measured eight amplifiers operating at 4.6 GHz that exhibit gains of 20 dB with
less than 1 dB gain ripple and up to 500 MHz bandwidth. The amplifiers further
achieve high output saturation powers around -73 dBm based on the use of
rf-SQUID arrays as their nonlinear element. We characterize the system readout
efficiency and its signal-to-noise ratio near saturation using a Sycamore
processor, finding the data consistent with near quantum limited noise
performance of the amplifiers. In addition, we measure the amplifiers'
intermodulation distortion in two-tone experiments as a function of input power
and inter-tone detuning, and observe excess distortion at small detuning with a
pronounced dip as a function of signal power, which we interpret in terms of
power-dependent dielectric losses.Comment: 14 pages, 10 figure
Combined encoding and decoupling solution to problems of decoherence and design in solid-state quantum computing
Proposals for scalable quantum computing devices suffer not only from
decoherence due to the interaction with their environment, but also from severe
engineering constraints. Here we introduce a practical solution to these major
concerns, addressing solid state proposals in particular. Decoherence is first
reduced by encoding a logical qubit into two qubits, then completely eliminated
by an efficient set of decoupling pulse sequences. The same encoding removes
the need for single-qubit operations, that pose a difficult design constraint.
We further show how the dominant decoherence processes can be identified
empirically, in order to optimize the decoupling pulses.Comment: 5 pages, Revtex4, updated, shortened version to appear in Phys. Rev.
Let
Analysis of the putative role of CR1 in Alzheimer’s disease: Genetic association, expression and function
Chronic activation of the complement system and induced inflammation are associated with neuropathology in Alzheimer's disease (AD). Recent large genome wide association studies (GWAS) have identified single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the C3b/C4b receptor (CR1 or CD35) that are associated with late onset AD. Here, anti-CR1 antibodies (Abs) directed against different epitopes of the receptor, were used to localize CR1 in brain, and relative binding affinities of the CR1 ligands, C1q and C3b, were assessed by ELISA. Most Abs tested stained red blood cells in blood vessels but showed no staining in brain parenchyma. However, two monoclonal anti-CR1 Abs labeled astrocytes in all of the cases tested, and this reactivity was preabsorbed by purified recombinant human CR1. Human brain-derived astrocyte cultures were also reactive with both mAbs. The amount of astrocyte staining varied among the samples, but no consistent difference was conferred by diagnosis or the GWAS-identified SNPs rs4844609 or rs6656401. Plasma levels of soluble CR1 did not correlate with diagnosis but a slight increase was observed with rs4844609 and rs6656401 SNP. There was also a modest but statistically significant increase in relative binding activity of C1q to CR1 with the rs4844609 SNP compared to CR1 without the SNP, and of C3b to CR1 in the CR1 genotypes containing the rs6656401 SNP (also associated with the larger isoform of CR1) regardless of clinical diagnosis. These results suggest that it is unlikely that astrocyte CR1 expression levels or C1q or C3b binding activity are the cause of the GWAS identified association of CR1 variants with AD. Further careful functional studies are needed to determine if the variant-dictated number of CR1 expressed on red blood cells contributes to the role of this receptor in the progression of AD, or if another mechanism is involved
What Is Stochastic Resonance? Definitions, Misconceptions, Debates, and Its Relevance to Biology
Stochastic resonance is said to be observed when increases in levels of unpredictable fluctuations—e.g., random noise—cause an increase in a metric of the quality of signal transmission or detection performance, rather than a decrease. This counterintuitive effect relies on system nonlinearities and on some parameter ranges being “suboptimal”. Stochastic resonance has been observed, quantified, and described in a plethora of physical and biological systems, including neurons. Being a topic of widespread multidisciplinary interest, the definition of stochastic resonance has evolved significantly over the last decade or so, leading to a number of debates, misunderstandings, and controversies. Perhaps the most important debate is whether the brain has evolved to utilize random noise in vivo, as part of the “neural code”. Surprisingly, this debate has been for the most part ignored by neuroscientists, despite much indirect evidence of a positive role for noise in the brain. We explore some of the reasons for this and argue why it would be more surprising if the brain did not exploit randomness provided by noise—via stochastic resonance or otherwise—than if it did. We also challenge neuroscientists and biologists, both computational and experimental, to embrace a very broad definition of stochastic resonance in terms of signal-processing “noise benefits”, and to devise experiments aimed at verifying that random variability can play a functional role in the brain, nervous system, or other areas of biology
Activated escape of driven systems
The problem of activated escape in a far-from-equilibrium system is analysed theoretically, numerically and by analogue electronic experiments. The process is shown to occur via optimal fluctuations that are well described, under diverse conditions, in terms of a new physical quantity, the logarithmic susceptibility (LS)