1,039 research outputs found
Distillation of Bell states in open systems
In this work we review the entire classification of 2x2 distillable states
for protocols with a finite numbers of copies. We show a distillation protocol
that allows to distill Bell states with non zero probability at any time for an
initial singlet in vacuum. It is shown that the same protocol used in non zero
thermal baths yields a considerable recovering of entanglement.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figure
Pedestrian index theorem a la Aharonov-Casher for bulk threshold modes in corrugated multilayer graphene
Zero-modes, their topological degeneracy and relation to index theorems have
attracted attention in the study of single- and bilayer graphene. For
negligible scalar potentials, index theorems explain why the degeneracy of the
zero-energy Landau level of a Dirac hamiltonian is not lifted by gauge field
disorder, for example due to ripples, whereas other Landau levels become
broadened by the inhomogenous effective magnetic field. That also the bilayer
hamiltonian supports such protected bulk zero-modes was proved formally by
Katsnelson and Prokhorova to hold on a compact manifold by using the
Atiyah-Singer index theorem. Here we complement and generalize this result in a
pedestrian way by pointing out that the simple argument by Aharonov and Casher
for degenerate zero-modes of a Dirac hamiltonian in the infinite plane extends
naturally to the multilayer case. The degeneracy remains, though at nonzero
energy, also in the presence of a gap. These threshold modes make the spectrum
asymmetric. The rest of the spectrum, however, remains symmetric even in
arbitrary gauge fields, a fact related to supersymmetry. Possible benefits of
this connection are discussed.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures. The second version states now also in words that
the conjugation symmetry that in the massive case gets replaced by
supersymmetry is the chiral symmetry. Changes in figure
Torsion induces Gravity
In this work the Poincare-Chern Simons and Anti de Sitter Chern Simons
gravities are studied. For both a solution that can be casted as a black hole
with manifest torsion is found. Those solutions resemble Schwarzschild and
Schwarzschild-AdS solutions respectively.Comment: 4 pages, RevTe
Temporal meson correlators at finite temperature on quenched anisotropic lattice
We study charmonium correlators at finite temperature in quenched anisotropic
lattice QCD. The smearing technique is applied to enhance the low energy part
of the correlator. We use two analysis procedures: the maximum entropy method
for extraction of the spectral function without assuming specific form, as an
estimate of the shape of spectral function, and the fit assuming
typical forms as quantitative evaluation of the parameters associated to the
forms. We find that at the ground state peak has almost the
same mass as at T=0 and almost vanishing width. At , our result
suggests that the correlator still has nontrivial peak structure at almost the
same position as below with finite width.Comment: Lattice 2002 Nonzero temperature 3page
Exact solutions of the isoholonomic problem and the optimal control problem in holonomic quantum computation
The isoholonomic problem in a homogeneous bundle is formulated and solved
exactly. The problem takes a form of a boundary value problem of a variational
equation. The solution is applied to the optimal control problem in holonomic
quantum computer. We provide a prescription to construct an optimal controller
for an arbitrary unitary gate and apply it to a -dimensional unitary gate
which operates on an -dimensional Hilbert space with . Our
construction is applied to several important unitary gates such as the Hadamard
gate, the CNOT gate, and the two-qubit discrete Fourier transformation gate.
Controllers for these gates are explicitly constructed.Comment: 19 pages, no figures, LaTeX2
Single-experiment-detectable multipartite entanglement witness for ensemble quantum computing
In this paper we provide an operational method to detect multipartite
entanglement in ensemble-based quantum computing. This method is based on the
concept of entanglement witness. We decompose the entanglement witness for each
class of multipartite entanglement into nonlocal operations in addition to
local measurements. Individual single qubit measurements are performed
simultaneously, hence complete detection of entanglement is performed in a
single run experiment. This approach is particularly important for experiments
where it is operationally difficult to prepare several copies of an unknown
quantum state and in this sense the introduced scheme in this work is superior
to the generally used entanglement witnesses that require a number of
experiments and preparation of copies of quantum state.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, minor changes have been mad
Topological Signature of First Order Phase Transitions
We show that the presence and the location of first order phase transitions
in a thermodynamic system can be deduced by the study of the topology of the
potential energy function, V(q), without introducing any thermodynamic measure.
In particular, we present the thermodynamics of an analytically solvable
mean-field model with a k-body interaction which -depending on the value of k-
displays no transition (k=1), second order (k=2) or first order (k>2) phase
transition. This rich behavior is quantitatively retrieved by the investigation
of a topological invariant, the Euler characteristic, of some submanifolds of
the configuration space. Finally, we conjecture a direct link between the Euler
characteristic and the thermodynamic entropy.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figure
Quantum critical scaling of the geometric tensors
Berry phases and the quantum-information theoretic notion of fidelity have
been recently used to analyze quantum phase transitions from a geometrical
perspective. In this paper we unify these two approaches showing that the
underlying mechanism is the critical singular behavior of a complex tensor over
the Hamiltonian parameter space. This is achieved by performing a scaling
analysis of this quantum geometric tensor in the vicinity of the critical
points. In this way most of the previous results are understood on general
grounds and new ones are found. We show that criticality is not a sufficient
condition to ensure superextensive divergence of the geometric tensor, and
state the conditions under which this is possible. The validity of this
analysis is further checked by exact diagonalization of the spin-1/2 XXZ
Heisenberg chain.Comment: Typos correcte
Reply to the comment by D. Kreimer and E. Mielke
We respond to the comment by Kreimer et. al. about the torsional contribution
to the chiral anomaly in curved spacetimes. We discuss their claims and refute
its main conclusion.Comment: 9 pages, revte
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