417 research outputs found
What Happens to the Bad Apples: An Empirical Study of Suspensions in New York City Schools
The article presents information on the need of improving the social condition and opportunity of low income group with reference to the public school system. The increase in the number of suspended students, importance of classroom management and the disruptive behavior of students is discussed. The educational environment, extended due process rights of students and the related educational legislation and regulations is also discussed
The Superconducting Quasiparticle-Amplifying Transmon: A Qubit-Based Sensor for meV Scale Phonons and Single THz Photons
With great interest from the quantum computing community, an immense amount
of R&D effort has been invested into improving superconducting qubits. The
technologies developed for the design and fabrication of these qubits can be
directly applied to applications for ultra-low threshold particle detectors,
e.g. low-mass dark matter and far-IR photon sensing. We propose a novel sensor
based on the transmon qubit architecture combined with a signal-enhancing
superconducting quasiparticle amplification stage. We refer to these sensors as
SQUATs: Superconducting Quasiparticle-Amplifying Transmons. We detail the
operating principle and design of this new sensor and predict that with minimal
R&D effort, solid-state based detectors patterned with these sensors can
achieve sensitivity to single THz photons, and sensitivity to
phonons in the detector absorber substrate on the timescale.Comment: 6 pages main, 8 pages appendix, 12 figures. Added new appendix on
signal and readout bandwidth. Submitted to PR
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Empowering a qudit-based quantum processor by traversing the dual bosonic ladder
High-dimensional quantum information processing has emerged as a promising avenue to transcend hardware limitations and advance the frontiers of quantum technologies. Harnessing the untapped potential of the so-called qudits necessitates the development of quantum protocols beyond the established qubit methodologies. Here, we present a robust, hardware-efficient, and scalable approach for operating multidimensional solid-state systems using Raman-assisted two-photon interactions. We then utilize them to construct extensible multi-qubit operations, realize highly entangled multidimensional states including atomic squeezed states and Schrödinger cat states, and implement programmable entanglement distribution along a qudit array. Our work illuminates the quantum electrodynamics of strongly driven multi-qudit systems and provides the experimental foundation for the future development of high-dimensional quantum applications such as quantum sensing and fault-tolerant quantum computing
Benchmarking quantum logic operations relative to thresholds for fault tolerance
Contemporary methods for benchmarking noisy quantum processors typically
measure average error rates or process infidelities. However, thresholds for
fault-tolerant quantum error correction are given in terms of worst-case error
rates -- defined via the diamond norm -- which can differ from average error
rates by orders of magnitude. One method for resolving this discrepancy is to
randomize the physical implementation of quantum gates, using techniques like
randomized compiling (RC). In this work, we use gate set tomography to perform
precision characterization of a set of two-qubit logic gates to study RC on a
superconducting quantum processor. We find that, under RC, gate errors are
accurately described by a stochastic Pauli noise model without coherent errors,
and that spatially-correlated coherent errors and non-Markovian errors are
strongly suppressed. We further show that the average and worst-case error
rates are equal for randomly compiled gates, and measure a maximum worst-case
error of 0.0197(3) for our gate set. Our results show that randomized
benchmarks are a viable route to both verifying that a quantum processor's
error rates are below a fault-tolerance threshold, and to bounding the failure
rates of near-term algorithms, if -- and only if -- gates are implemented via
randomization methods which tailor noise
Broadband CPW-based impedance-transformed Josephson parametric amplifier
Quantum-limited Josephson parametric amplifiers play a pivotal role in
advancing the field of circuit quantum electrodynamics by enabling the fast and
high-fidelity measurement of weak microwave signals. Therefore, it is necessary
to develop robust parametric amplifiers with low noise, broad bandwidth, and
reduced design complexity for microwave detection. However, current broadband
parametric amplifiers either have degraded noise performance or rely on complex
designs. Here, we present a device based on the broadband impedance-transformed
Josephson parametric amplifier (IMPA) that integrates a horn-like coplanar
waveguide (CPW) transmission line, which significantly decreases the design and
fabrication complexity, while keeping comparable performance. The device shows
an instantaneous bandwidth of 700(200) MHz for 15(20) dB gain with an average
saturation power of -110 dBm and near quantum-limited added noise. The
operating frequency can be tuned over 1.4 GHz using an external flux bias. We
further demonstrate the negligible back-action from our device on a transmon
qubit. The amplification performance and simplicity of our device promise its
wide adaptation in quantum metrology, quantum communication, and quantum
information processing.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figure
A Tandem Mass Spectrometry Sequence Database Search Method for Identification of O-Fucosylated Proteins by Mass Spectrometry.
Thrombospondin type 1 repeats (TSRs), small adhesive protein domains with a wide range of functions, are usually modified with O-linked fucose, which may be extended to O-fucose-β1,3-glucose. Collision-induced dissociation (CID) spectra of O-fucosylated peptides cannot be sequenced by standard tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS) sequence database search engines because O-linked glycans are highly labile in the gas phase and are effectively absent from the CID peptide fragment spectra, resulting in a large mass error. Electron transfer dissociation (ETD) preserves O-linked glycans on peptide fragments, but only a subset of tryptic peptides with low m/ z can be reliably sequenced from ETD spectra compared to CID. Accordingly, studies to date that have used MS to identify O-fucosylated TSRs have required manual interpretation of CID mass spectra even when ETD was also employed. In order to facilitate high-throughput, automatic identification of O-fucosylated peptides from CID spectra, we re-engineered the MS/MS sequence database search engine Comet and the MS data analysis suite Trans-Proteomic Pipeline to enable automated sequencing of peptides exhibiting the neutral losses characteristic of labile O-linked glycans. We used our approach to reanalyze published proteomics data from Plasmodium parasites and identified multiple glycoforms of TSR-containing proteins
Programmable Heisenberg Interactions Between Floquet Qubits
The trade-off between robustness and tunability is a central challenge in the pursuit of quantum simulation and fault-tolerant quantum computation. In particular, quantum architectures are often designed to achieve high coherence at the expense of tunability. Many current qubit designs have fixed energy levels and consequently limited types of controllable interactions. Here by adiabatically transforming fixed-frequency superconducting circuits into modifiable Floquet qubits, we demonstrate an XXZ Heisenberg interaction with fully adjustable anisotropy. This interaction model can act as the primitive for an expressive set of quantum operations, but is also the basis for quantum simulations of spin systems. To illustrate the robustness and versatility of our Floquet protocol, we tailor the Heisenberg Hamiltonian and implement two-qubit iSWAP, CZ and SWAP gates with good estimated fidelities. In addition, we implement a Heisenberg interaction between higher energy levels and employ it to construct a three-qubit CCZ gate, also with a competitive fidelity. Our protocol applies to multiple fixed-frequency high-coherence platforms, providing a collection of interactions for high-performance quantum information processing. It also establishes the potential of the Floquet framework as a tool for exploring quantum electrodynamics and optimal control
Rapid cryogenic characterisation of 1024 integrated silicon quantum dots
Quantum computers are nearing the thousand qubit mark, with the current focus
on scaling to improve computational performance. As quantum processors grow in
complexity, new challenges arise such as the management of device variability
and the interface with supporting electronics. Spin qubits in silicon quantum
dots are poised to address these challenges with their proven control
fidelities and potential for compatibility with large-scale integration. Here,
we demonstrate the integration of 1024 silicon quantum dots with on-chip
digital and analogue electronics, all operating below 1 K. A high-frequency
analogue multiplexer provides fast access to all devices with minimal
electrical connections, enabling characteristic data across the quantum dot
array to be acquired in just 5 minutes. We achieve this by leveraging
radio-frequency reflectometry with state-of-the-art signal integrity, reaching
a minimum integration time of 160 ps. Key quantum dot parameters are extracted
by fast automated machine learning routines to assess quantum dot yield and
understand the impact of device design. We find correlations between quantum
dot parameters and room temperature transistor behaviour that may be used as a
proxy for in-line process monitoring. Our results show how rapid large-scale
studies of silicon quantum devices can be performed at lower temperatures and
measurement rates orders of magnitude faster than current probing techniques,
and form a platform for the future on-chip addressing of large scale qubit
arrays.Comment: Main text: 14 pages, 8 figures, 1 table Supplementary: 8 pages, 6
figure
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