8,162 research outputs found
Quantum Circuit Placement
We study the problem of the practical realization of an abstract quantum
circuit when executed on quantum hardware. By practical, we mean adapting the
circuit to particulars of the physical environment which restricts/complicates
the establishment of certain direct interactions between qubits. This is a
quantum version of the classical circuit placement problem. We study the
theoretical aspects of the problem and also present empirical results that
match the best known solutions that have been developed by experimentalists.
Finally, we discuss the efficiency of the approach and scalability of its
implementation with regards to the future development of quantum hardware.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figures. Improved theory and software implementation, new
experimental result
Resonant tunneling magnetoresistance in epitaxial metal-semiconductor heterostructures
We report on resonant tunneling magnetoresistance via localized states
through a ZnSe semiconducting barrier which can reverse the sign of the
effective spin polarization of tunneling electrons. Experiments performed on
Fe/ZnSe/Fe planar junctions have shown that positive, negative or even its
sign-reversible magnetoresistance can be obtained, depending on the bias
voltage, the energy of localized states in the ZnSe barrier and spatial
symmetry. The averaging of conduction over all localized states in a junction
under resonant condition is strongly detrimental to the magnetoresistance
Interface bonding of a ferromagnetic/semiconductor junction : a photoemission study of Fe/ZnSe(001)
We have probed the interface of a ferromagnetic/semiconductor (FM/SC)
heterojunction by a combined high resolution photoemission spectroscopy and
x-ray photoelectron diffraction study. Fe/ZnSe(001) is considered as an example
of a very low reactivity interface system and it expected to constitute large
Tunnel Magnetoresistance devices. We focus on the interface atomic environment,
on the microscopic processes of the interface formation and on the iron
valence-band. We show that the Fe contact with ZnSe induces a chemical
conversion of the ZnSe outermost atomic layers. The main driving force that
induces this rearrangement is the requirement for a stable Fe-Se bonding at the
interface and a Se monolayer that floats at the Fe growth front. The released
Zn atoms are incorporated in substitution in the Fe lattice position. This
formation process is independent of the ZnSe surface termination (Zn or Se).
The Fe valence-band evolution indicates that the d-states at the Fermi level
show up even at submonolayer Fe coverage but that the Fe bulk character is only
recovered above 10 monolayers. Indeed, the Fe 1-band states,
theoretically predicted to dominate the tunneling conductance of Fe/ZnSe/Fe
junctions, are strongly modified at the FM/SC interface.Comment: 23 pages, 5 figures, submitted to Physical review
Efficient discrete-time simulations of continuous-time quantum query algorithms
The continuous-time query model is a variant of the discrete query model in
which queries can be interleaved with known operations (called "driving
operations") continuously in time. Interesting algorithms have been discovered
in this model, such as an algorithm for evaluating nand trees more efficiently
than any classical algorithm. Subsequent work has shown that there also exists
an efficient algorithm for nand trees in the discrete query model; however,
there is no efficient conversion known for continuous-time query algorithms for
arbitrary problems.
We show that any quantum algorithm in the continuous-time query model whose
total query time is T can be simulated by a quantum algorithm in the discrete
query model that makes O[T log(T) / log(log(T))] queries. This is the first
upper bound that is independent of the driving operations (i.e., it holds even
if the norm of the driving Hamiltonian is very large). A corollary is that any
lower bound of T queries for a problem in the discrete-time query model
immediately carries over to a lower bound of \Omega[T log(log(T))/log (T)] in
the continuous-time query model.Comment: 12 pages, 6 fig
Future large-scale water-Cherenkov detector
MEMPHYS (MEgaton Mass PHYSics) is a proposed large-scale water-Cherenkov
experiment to be performed deep underground. It is dedicated to nucleon decay
searches and the detection of neutrinos from supernovae, solar, and atmospheric
neutrinos, as well as neutrinos from a future beam to measure the CP violating
phase in the leptonic sector and the mass hierarchy. This paper provides an
overview of the latest studies on the expected performance of MEMPHYS in view
of detailed estimates of its physics reach, mainly concerning neutrino beams
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