319 research outputs found
Sigma terms from an SU(3) chiral extrapolation
We report a new analysis of lattice simulation results for octet baryon
masses in 2+1-flavor QCD, with an emphasis on a precise determination of the
strangeness nucleon sigma term. A controlled chiral extrapolation of a recent
PACS-CS Collaboration data set yields baryon masses which exhibit remarkable
agreement both with experimental values at the physical point and with the
results of independent lattice QCD simulations at unphysical meson masses.
Using the Feynman-Hellmann relation, we evaluate sigma commutators for all
octet baryons. The small statistical uncertainty, and considerably smaller
model-dependence, allows a signifcantly more precise determination of the
pion-nucleon sigma commutator and the strangeness sigma term than hitherto
possible, namely {\sigma}{\pi}N=45 \pm 6 MeV and {\sigma}s = 21 \pm 6 MeV at
the physical point.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Demonstration of Robust Quantum Gate Tomography via Randomized Benchmarking
Typical quantum gate tomography protocols struggle with a self-consistency
problem: the gate operation cannot be reconstructed without knowledge of the
initial state and final measurement, but such knowledge cannot be obtained
without well-characterized gates. A recently proposed technique, known as
randomized benchmarking tomography (RBT), sidesteps this self-consistency
problem by designing experiments to be insensitive to preparation and
measurement imperfections. We implement this proposal in a superconducting
qubit system, using a number of experimental improvements including
implementing each of the elements of the Clifford group in single `atomic'
pulses and custom control hardware to enable large overhead protocols. We show
a robust reconstruction of several single-qubit quantum gates, including a
unitary outside the Clifford group. We demonstrate that RBT yields physical
gate reconstructions that are consistent with fidelities obtained by randomized
benchmarking
Recent results on nucleon sigma terms in lattice QCD
It has proven a significant challenge to experiment and phenomenology to
extract precise values of the nucleon sigma terms. This difficulty opens the
window for lattice QCD simulations to lead the field in resolving this aspect
of nucleon structure. Here we report on recent advances in the extraction of
nucleon sigma terms in lattice QCD. In particular, the strangeness component is
now being resolved to a precision that far surpasses best phenomenological
estimates.Comment: 6 pages, 1 figure; prepared for Proc. 4th Int Symposium on Symmetries
in Subatomic Physics (SSP2009), Taipei, Taiwan, June 2-5 200
Imaging of Laser-Plasma X-ray Emission with Charge-Injection Devices
This work details the method of obtaining time-integrated images of laser–plasma x-ray emission using charge-injection devices (CIDs), as has been demonstrated on the University of Rochester’s 60-beam UV OMEGA laser facility [T. R. Boehly et al., Opt. Commun. 133, 495 (1997)]. The CID has an architecture similar to a charge-coupled device. The differences make them more resistant to radiation damage and, therefore, more appropriate for some application in laser–plasma x-ray imaging. CID-recorded images have been obtained with x-ray pinhole cameras, x-ray microscopes, x-ray spectrometers, and monochromatic x-ray imaging systems. Simultaneous images obtained on these systems with calibrated x-ray film have enabled determination of the absolute detection efficiency of the CIDs in the energy range from 2 to 8 keV
Graphene-based Josephson junction single photon detector
We propose to use graphene-based Josephson junctions (gJjs) to detect single
photons in a wide electromagnetic spectrum from visible to radio frequencies.
Our approach takes advantage of the exceptionally low electronic heat capacity
of monolayer graphene and its constricted thermal conductance to its phonon
degrees of freedom. Such a system could provide high sensitivity photon
detection required for research areas including quantum information processing
and radio-astronomy. As an example, we present our device concepts for gJj
single photon detectors in both the microwave and infrared regimes. The dark
count rate and intrinsic quantum efficiency are computed based on parameters
from a measured gJj, demonstrating feasibility within existing technologies.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures, and 1 table in the main tex
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