448 research outputs found
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https://digitalcommons.salve.edu/goelet-new-york/1219/thumbnail.jp
StreamIt: A Language and Compiler for Communication-Exposed Architectures
With the increasing miniaturization of transistors, wire delays are becoming a dominant factor in microprocessor performance. To address this issue, a number of emerging architectures contain replicated processing units with software-exposed communication between one unit and another (e.g., Raw, SmartMemories, TRIPS). However, for their use to be widespread, it will be necesary to develop a common machine language to allow programmers to express an algorithm in a way that can be efficiently mapped across these architectures. We propose a new common machine language for grid-based software-exposed architectures: StreamIt. StreamIt is a high-level programming language with explicit support for streaming computation. Unlike sequential programs with obscured dependence information and complex communication patterns, a stream program is naturally written as a set of concurrent filters with regular steady-state communication. The language imposes a hierarchical structure on the stream graph that enables novel representations and optimizations within the StreamIt compiler. We have implemented a fully functional compiler that parallelizes StreamIt applications for Raw, including several load-balancing transformations. Though StreamIt exposes the parallelism and communication patterns of stream programs, analysis is needed to adapt a stream program to a software-exposed processor. We describe a partitioning algorithm that employs fission and fusion transformations to adjust the granularity of a stream graph, a layout algorithm that maps a stream graph to a given network topology, and a scheduling strategy that generates a fine-grained static communication pattern for each computational element. Using the cycle-accurate Raw simulator, we demonstrate that the StreamIt compiler can automatically map a high-level stream abstraction to Raw. We consider this work to be a first step towards a portable programming model for communication-exposed architectures.Singapore-MIT Alliance (SMA
Competition between electric field and magnetic field noise in the decoherence of a single spin in diamond
We analyze the impact of electric field and magnetic field fluctuations in
the decoherence of the electronic spin associated with a single
nitrogen-vacancy (NV) defect in diamond by engineering spin eigenstates
protected either against magnetic noise or against electric noise. The
competition between these noise sources is analyzed quantitatively by changing
their relative strength through modifications of the environment. This study
provides significant insights into the decoherence of the NV electronic spin,
which is valuable for quantum metrology and sensing applications.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, including supplementary information
Sensing remote nuclear spins
Sensing single nuclear spins is a central challenge in magnetic resonance
based imaging techniques. Although different methods and especially diamond
defect based sensing and imaging techniques in principle have shown sufficient
sensitivity, signals from single nuclear spins are usually too weak to be
distinguished from background noise. Here, we present the detection and
identification of remote single C-13 nuclear spins embedded in nuclear spin
baths surrounding a single electron spins of a nitrogen-vacancy centre in
diamond. With dynamical decoupling control of the centre electron spin, the
weak magnetic field ~10 nT from a single nuclear spin located ~3 nm from the
centre with hyperfine coupling as weak as ~500 Hz is amplified and detected.
The quantum nature of the coupling is confirmed and precise position and the
vector components of the nuclear field are determined. Given the distance over
which nuclear magnetic fields can be detected the technique marks a firm step
towards imaging, detecting and controlling nuclear spin species external to the
diamond sensor
Towards T1-limited magnetic resonance imaging using Rabi beats
Two proof-of-principle experiments towards T1-limited magnetic resonance
imaging with NV centers in diamond are demonstrated. First, a large number of
Rabi oscillations is measured and it is demonstrated that the hyperfine
interaction due to the NV's 14N can be extracted from the beating oscillations.
Second, the Rabi beats under V-type microwave excitation of the three hyperfine
manifolds is studied experimentally and described theoretically.Comment: 6 pages, 8 figure
A physically motivated analytical expression for the temperature dependence of the zero-field splitting of the nitrogen-vacancy center in diamond
The temperature dependence of the zero-field splitting (ZFS) between the
and levels of the nitrogen-vacancy (NV)
center's electronic ground-state spin triplet can be used as a robust nanoscale
thermometer in a broad range of environments. However, despite numerous
measurements of this dependence in different temperature ranges, to our
knowledge no analytical expression has been put forward that captures the
scaling of the ZFS of the NV center across all relevant temperatures. Here we
present a simple, analytical, and physically motivated expression for the
temperature dependence of the NV center's ZFS that matches all experimental
observations, in which the ZFS shifts in proportion to the occupation numbers
of two representative phonon modes. In contrast to prior models our expression
does not diverge outside the regions of fitting. We show that our model
quantitatively matches experimental measurements of the ZFS from 15 to 500 K in
single NV centers in ultra-pure bulk diamond, and we compare our model and
measurements to prior models and experimental data.Comment: Main text: 7 pages, 4 figures, 1 table, 44 references. Supplemental
Material: 12 pages, 5 figures, 2 tables, 23 reference
Composite-pulse magnetometry with a solid-state quantum sensor
The sensitivity of quantum magnetometers is challenged by control errors and,
especially in the solid-state, by their short coherence times. Refocusing
techniques can overcome these limitations and improve the sensitivity to
periodic fields, but they come at the cost of reduced bandwidth and cannot be
applied to sense static (DC) or aperiodic fields. Here we experimentally
demonstrate that continuous driving of the sensor spin by a composite pulse
known as rotary-echo (RE) yields a flexible magnetometry scheme, mitigating
both driving power imperfections and decoherence. A suitable choice of RE
parameters compensates for different scenarios of noise strength and origin.
The method can be applied to nanoscale sensing in variable environments or to
realize noise spectroscopy. In a room-temperature implementation based on a
single electronic spin in diamond, composite-pulse magnetometry provides a
tunable trade-off between sensitivities in the microT/sqrt(Hz) range,
comparable to those obtained with Ramsey spectroscopy, and coherence times
approaching T1
Co-designing marine science beyond good intentions: support stakeholders’ empowerment in transformative pathways
Calls for science to innovate by including stakeholders' in the creation of marine knowledge have been rising, to create impact beyond laboratories and to contribute to the empowerment of local communities when interacting with marine and coastal ecosystems. As a transdisciplinary group of scientists working on co-designing research projects, this paper draws upon our experiences to further define the concept and seek to improve the process of co-design. We highlight the key barriers for co-design processes to contribute to increasing stakeholders' capacity to produce intended effects on marine policy. We suggest that stakeholder engagement requires overcoming the resistance to non-scientific knowledge sources and considering power asymmetries in the governance and management of the ocean. We argue that power and politics must be placed at the very heart of the production of a co-designed marine science and must be an aspect of the facilitation itself. In this paper, we aim to provide insights to navigate throughout the journey of stakeholder engagement, with the critical perspective necessary to make this process socially and environmentally effective
Hybrid Mechanical Systems
We discuss hybrid systems in which a mechanical oscillator is coupled to
another (microscopic) quantum system, such as trapped atoms or ions,
solid-state spin qubits, or superconducting devices. We summarize and compare
different coupling schemes and describe first experimental implementations.
Hybrid mechanical systems enable new approaches to quantum control of
mechanical objects, precision sensing, and quantum information processing.Comment: To cite this review, please refer to the published book chapter (see
Journal-ref and DOI). This v2 corresponds to the published versio
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