203 research outputs found
Higgs diphoton rate enhancement from supersymmetric physics beyond the MSSM
We show that supersymmetric "new physics" beyond the MSSM can naturally
accommodate a Higgs mass near 126 GeV and enhance the signal rate in the Higgs
to diphoton channel, while the signal rates in all the other Higgs decay
channels coincide with Standard Model expectations, except possibly the Higgs
to Z-photon channel. The "new physics" that corrects the relevant Higgs
couplings can be captured by two supersymmetric effective operators. We provide
a simple example of an underlying model in which these operators are
simultaneously generated. The scale of "new physics" that generates these
operators can be around 5 TeV or larger, and outside the reach of the LHC.Comment: 24 pages, 4 figure
Ionic mechanisms of action potential propagation velocity changes in peripheral C-fibers. Implications for pain
A Semiconductor Nanowire-Based Superconducting Qubit
We introduce a hybrid qubit based on a semiconductor nanowire with an
epitaxially grown superconductor layer. Josephson energy of the transmon-like
device ("gatemon") is controlled by an electrostatic gate that depletes
carriers in a semiconducting weak link region. Strong coupling to an on-chip
microwave cavity and coherent qubit control via gate voltage pulses is
demonstrated, yielding reasonably long relaxation times (0.8 {\mu}s) and
dephasing times (1 {\mu}s), exceeding gate operation times by two orders of
magnitude, in these first-generation devices. Because qubit control relies on
voltages rather than fluxes, dissipation in resistive control lines is reduced,
screening reduces crosstalk, and the absence of flux control allows operation
in a magnetic field, relevant for topological quantum information
Voltage-Controlled Superconducting Quantum Bus
We demonstrate the ability of an epitaxial semiconductor-superconductor
nanowire to serve as a field-effect switch to tune a superconducting cavity.
Two superconducting gatemon qubits are coupled to the cavity, which acts as a
quantum bus. Using a gate voltage to control the superconducting switch yields
up to a factor of 8 change in qubit-qubit coupling between the on and off
states without detrimental effect on qubit coherence. High-bandwidth operation
of the coupling switch on nanosecond timescales degrades qubit coherence
Anharmonicity of a Gatemon Qubit with a Few-Mode Josephson Junction
Coherent operation of gate-voltage-controlled hybrid transmon qubits
(gatemons) based on semiconductor nanowires was recently demonstrated. Here we
experimentally investigate the anharmonicity in epitaxial InAs-Al Josephson
junctions, a key parameter for their use as a qubit. Anharmonicity is found to
be reduced by roughly a factor of two compared to conventional metallic
junctions, and dependent on gate voltage. Experimental results are consistent
with a theoretical model, indicating that Josephson coupling is mediated by a
small number of highly transmitting modes in the semiconductor junction
Photon Assisted Tunneling of Zero Modes in a Majorana Wire
Hybrid nanowires with proximity-induced superconductivity in the topological
regime host Majorana zero modes (MZMs) at their ends, and networks of such
structures can produce topologically protected qubits. In a double-island
geometry where each segment hosts a pair of MZMs, inter-pair coupling mixes the
charge parity of the islands and opens an energy gap between the even and odd
charge states at the inter-island charge degeneracy. Here, we report on the
spectroscopic measurement of such an energy gap in an InAs/Al double-island
device by tracking the position of the microwave-induced quasiparticle (qp)
transitions using a radio-frequency (rf) charge sensor. In zero magnetic field,
photon assisted tunneling (PAT) of Cooper pairs gives rise to resonant lines in
the 2e-2e periodic charge stability diagram. In the presence of a magnetic
field aligned along the nanowire, resonance lines are observed parallel to the
inter-island charge degeneracy of the 1e-1e periodic charge stability diagram,
where the 1e periodicity results from a zero-energy sub-gap state that emerges
in magnetic field. Resonant lines in the charge stability diagram indicate
coherent photon assisted tunneling of single-electron states, changing the
parity of the two islands. The dependence of resonant frequency on detuning
indicates a sizable (GHz-scale) hybridization of zero modes across the junction
separating islands
Superconducting Gatemon Qubit based on a Proximitized Two-Dimensional Electron Gas
The coherent tunnelling of Cooper pairs across Josephson junctions (JJs)
generates a nonlinear inductance that is used extensively in quantum
information processors based on superconducting circuits, from setting qubit
transition frequencies and interqubit coupling strengths, to the gain of
parametric amplifiers for quantum-limited readout. The inductance is either set
by tailoring the metal-oxide dimensions of single JJs, or magnetically tuned by
parallelizing multiple JJs in superconducting quantum interference devices
(SQUIDs) with local current-biased flux lines. JJs based on
superconductor-semiconductor hybrids represent a tantalizing all-electric
alternative. The gatemon is a recently developed transmon variant which employs
locally gated nanowire (NW) superconductor-semiconductor JJs for qubit control.
Here, we go beyond proof-of-concept and demonstrate that semiconducting
channels etched from a wafer-scale two-dimensional electron gas (2DEG) are a
suitable platform for building a scalable gatemon-based quantum computer. We
show 2DEG gatemons meet the requirements by performing voltage-controlled
single qubit rotations and two-qubit swap operations. We measure qubit
coherence times up to ~2 us, limited by dielectric loss in the 2DEG host
substrate
Suppressed Charge Dispersion via Resonant Tunneling in a Single-Channel Transmon
We demonstrate strong suppression of charge dispersion in a
semiconductor-based transmon qubit across Josephson resonances associated with
a quantum dot in the junction. On resonance, dispersion is drastically reduced
compared to conventional transmons with corresponding Josephson and charging
energies. We develop a model of qubit dispersion for a single-channel
resonance, which is in quantitative agreement with experimental data
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