14,058 research outputs found
Photon noise suppression by a built-in feedback loop
Visionary quantum photonic networks need transform-limited single photons on
demand. Resonance fluorescence on a quantum dot provides the access to a
solid-state single photon source, where the environment is unfortunately the
source of spin and charge noise that leads to fluctuations of the emission
frequency and destroys the needed indistinguishability. We demonstrate a
built-in stabilization approach for the photon stream, which relies solely on
charge carrier dynamics of a two-dimensional hole gas inside a micropillar
structure. The hole gas is fed by hole tunneling from field-ionized excitons
and influences the energetic position of the excitonic transition by changing
the local electric field at the position of the quantum dot. The standard
deviation of the photon noise is suppressed by nearly 50 percent (noise power
reduction of 6 dB) and it works in the developed micropillar structure for
frequencies up to 1 kHz. This built-in feedback loop represents an easy way for
photon noise suppression in large arrays of single photon emitters and promises
to reach higher bandwidth by device optimization.Comment: 17 pages, 4 figure
Tube Width Fluctuations in F-Actin Solutions
We determine the statistics of the local tube width in F-actin solutions,
beyond the usually reported mean value. Our experimental observations are
explained by a segment fluid theory based on the binary collision approximation
(BCA). In this systematic generalization of the standard mean-field approach
effective polymer segments interact via a potential representing the
topological constraints. The analytically predicted universal tube width
distribution with a stretched tail is in good agreement with the data.Comment: Final version, 5 pages, 4 figure
GINA - A Polarized Neutron Reflectometer at the Budapest Neutron Centre
The setup, capabilities and operation parameters of the neutron reflectometer
GINA, the recently installed "Grazing Incidence Neutron Apparatus" at the
Budapest Neutron Centre, are introduced. GINA, a dance-floor-type,
constant-energy, angle-dispersive reflectometer is equipped with a 2D
position-sensitive detector to study specular and off-specular scattering.
Wavelength options between 3.2 and 5.7 {\AA} are available for unpolarized and
polarized neutrons. Spin polarization and analysis are achieved by magnetized
transmission supermirrors and radio-frequency adiabatic spin flippers. As a
result of vertical focusing by the five-element (pyrolytic graphite)
monochromator the reflected intensity from a 20x20 mm sample has doubled. GINA
is dedicated to studies of magnetic films and heterostructures, but unpolarized
options for non-magnetic films, membranes and other surfaces are also provided.
Shortly after its startup, reflectivity values as low as 3x10-5 have been
measured on the instrument. The facility is now open for the international user
community, but its development is continuing mainly to establish new sample
environment options, the spin analysis of off-specularly scattered radiation
and further decrease of the background
Domain Walls and Anchoring Transitions Mimicking Nematic Biaxiality in the Oxadiazole Bent-Core Liquid Crystal C7
We investigate the origin of secondary disclinations that were recently
described as a new evidence of a biaxial nematic phase in an oxadiazole
bent-core thermotropic liquid crystal C7. With an assortment of optical
techniques such as polarizing optical microscopy, LC PolScope, and fluorescence
confocal polarizing microscopy, we demonstrate that the secondary disclinations
represent non-singular domain walls formed in an uniaxial nematic during the
surface anchoring transition, in which surface orientation of the director
changes from tangential (parallel to the bounding plates) to tilted. Each
domain wall separates two regions with the director tilted in opposite
azimuthal directions. At the centre of the wall, the director remains parallel
to the bonding plates. The domain walls can be easily removed by applying a
modest electric field. The anchoring transition is explained by the balance of
(a) the intrinsic perpendicular surface anchoring produced by the polyimide
aligning layer and (b) tangential alignment caused by ionic impurities forming
electric double layers. The model is supported by the fact that the temperature
of the tangential-tilted anchoring transition decreases as the cell thickness
increases and as the concentration of ionic species (added salt) increases. We
also demonstrate that the surface alignment is strongly affected by thermal
degradation of the samples. The study shows that C7 exhibits only a uniaxial
nematic phase and demonstrate yet another mechanism (formation of secondary
disclinations) by which a uniaxial nematic can mimic a biaxial nematic
behaviour.Comment: 21 pages, 9 Figures, 1 Tabl
Entanglement of two superconducting qubits in a waveguide cavity via monochromatic two-photon excitation
We report a system where fixed interactions between non-computational levels
make bright the otherwise forbidden two-photon 00 --> 11 transition. The system
is formed by hand selection and assembly of two discrete component
transmon-style superconducting qubits inside a rectangular microwave cavity.
The application of a monochromatic drive tuned to this transition induces
two-photon Rabi-like oscillations between the ground and doubly-excited states
via the Bell basis. The system therefore allows all-microwave two-qubit
universal control with the same techniques and hardware required for single
qubit control. We report Ramsey-like and spin echo sequences with the generated
Bell states, and measure a two-qubit gate fidelity of 90% (unconstrained) and
86% (maximum likelihood estimator).Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures. V2: add supplemental material about the
Schrieffer-Wolff transformatio
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