2,770 research outputs found

    Ferromagnetic Ising spin systems on the growing random tree

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    We analyze the ferromagnetic Ising model on a scale-free tree; the growing random network model with the linear attachment kernel Ak=k+αA_k=k+\alpha introduced by [Krapivsky et al.: Phys. Rev. Lett. {\bf 85} (2000) 4629-4632]. We derive an estimate of the divergent temperature TsT_s below which the zero-field susceptibility of the system diverges. Our result shows that TsT_s is related to α\alpha as tanh(J/Ts)=α/[2(α+1)]\tanh(J/T_s)=\alpha/[2(\alpha+1)], where JJ is the ferromagnetic interaction. An analysis of exactly solvable limit for the model and numerical calculation support the validity of this estimate.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figure

    Study of a model for the folding of a small protein

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    We describe the results obtained from an improved model for protein folding. We find that a good agreement with the native structure of a 46 residue long, five-letter protein segment is obtained by carefully tuning the parameters of the self-avoiding energy. In particular we find an improved free-energy profile. We also compare the efficiency of the multidimensional replica exchange method with the widely used parallel tempering.Comment: typos corrected, one figure adde

    Modified TAP equations for the SK spin glass

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    The stability of the TAP mean field equations is reanalyzed with the conclusion that the exclusive reason for the breakdown at the spin glass instability is an inconsistency for the value of the local susceptibility. A new alternative approach leads to modified equations which are in complete agreement with the original ones above the instability. Essentially altered results below the instability are presented and the consequences for the dynamical mean field equations are discussed.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figures, final revised version to appear in Europhys. Let

    Intracavity weak nonlinear phase shifts with single photon driving

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    We investigate a doubly resonant optical cavity containing a Kerr nonlinear medium that couples two modes by a cross phase modulation. One of these modes is driven by a single photon pulsed field, and the other mode is driven by a coherent state. We find an intrinsic phase noise mechanism for the cross phase shift on the coherent beam which can be attributed to the random emission times of single photons from the cavity. An application to a weak nonlinearity phase gate is discussed

    Feed-forward and its role in conditional linear optical quantum dynamics

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    Nonlinear optical quantum gates can be created probabilistically using only single photon sources, linear optical elements and photon-number resolving detectors. These gates are heralded but operate with probabilities much less than one. There is currently a large gap between the performance of the known circuits and the established upper bounds on their success probabilities. One possibility for increasing the probability of success of such gates is feed-forward, where one attempts to correct certain failure events that occurred in the gate's operation. In this brief report we examine the role of feed-forward in improving the success probability. In particular, for the non-linear sign shift gate, we find that in a three-mode implementation with a single round of feed-forward the optimal average probability of success is approximately given by p= 0.272. This value is only slightly larger than the general optimal success probability without feed-forward, P= 0.25.Comment: 4 pages, 3 eps figures, typeset using RevTex4, problems with figures resolve

    SU(N)-symmetric quasi-probability distribution functions

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    We present a set of N-dimensional functions, based on generalized SU(N)-symmetric coherent states, that represent finite-dimensional Wigner functions, Q-functions, and P-functions. We then show the fundamental properties of these functions and discuss their usefulness for analyzing N-dimensional pure and mixed quantum states.Comment: 16 pages, 2 figures. Updated text to reflect referee comment

    Local Probabilistic Decoding of a Quantum Code

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    flip is an extremely simple and maximally local classical decoder which has been used to great effect in certain classes of classical codes. When applied to quantum codes there exist constant-weight errors (such as half of a stabiliser) which are uncorrectable for this decoder, so previous studies have considered modified versions of flip, sometimes in conjunction with other decoders. We argue that this may not always be necessary, and present numerical evidence for the existence of a threshold for flip when applied to the looplike syndromes of a three-dimensional toric code on a cubic lattice. This result can be attributed to the fact that the lowest-weight uncorrectable errors for this decoder are closer (in terms of Hamming distance) to correctable errors than to other uncorrectable errors, and so they are likely to become correctable in future code cycles after transformation by additional noise. Introducing randomness into the decoder can allow it to correct these "uncorrectable" errors with finite probability, and for a decoding strategy that uses a combination of belief propagation and probabilistic flip we observe a threshold of 5.5%\sim5.5\% under phenomenological noise. This is comparable to the best known threshold for this code (7.1%\sim7.1\%) which was achieved using belief propagation and ordered statistics decoding [Higgott and Breuckmann, 2022], a strategy with a runtime of O(n3)O(n^3) as opposed to the O(n)O(n) (O(1)O(1) when parallelised) runtime of our local decoder. We expect that this strategy could be generalised to work well in other low-density parity check codes, and hope that these results will prompt investigation of other previously overlooked decoders.Comment: 10 pages + 1 page appendix, 7 figures. Comments welcome.; v3 Published versio
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