136 research outputs found
On-chip cavity quantum phonodynamics with an acceptor qubit in silicon
We describe a chip-based, solid-state analogue of cavity-QED utilizing
acoustic phonons instead of photons. We show how long-lived and tunable
acceptor impurity states in silicon nanomechanical cavities can play the role
of a matter non-linearity for coherent phonons just as, e.g., the Josephson
qubit plays in circuit-QED. Both strong coupling (number of Rabi oscillations ~
100) and strong dispersive coupling (0.1-2 MHz) regimes can be reached in
cavities in the 1-20 GHz range, enabling the control of single phonons,
phonon-phonon interactions, dispersive phonon readout of the acceptor qubit,
and compatibility with other optomechanical components such as phonon-photon
translators. We predict explicit experimental signatures of the acceptor-cavity
system.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, PDFLaTeX. New version improves clarit
Qubit purification speed-up for three complementary continuous measurements
We consider qubit purification under simultaneous continuous measurement of
the three non-commuting qubit operators \sigma_x, \sigma_y, \sigma_z. The
purification dynamics is quantified by (i) the average purification rate, and
(ii) the mean time of reaching given level of purity, (1-\epsilon). Under ideal
measurements (detector efficiency \eta=1), we show in the first case an
asymptotic mean purification speed-up of 4 as compared to a standard
(classical) single-detector measurement. However by the second measure --- the
mean time of first passage T(\epsilon) of the purity --- the corresponding
speed-up is only 2. We explain these speed-ups using the isotropy of the qubit
evolution that provides an equivalence between the original measurement
directions and three simultaneous measurements, one with an axis aligned along
the Bloch vector and the other with axes in the two complementary directions.
For inefficient detectors, \eta=1-\delta <1 the mean time of first passage
T(\delta,\epsilon) increases since qubit purification competes with an
isotropic qubit dephasing. In the asymptotic high-purity limit (\epsilon,
\delta << 1) we show that the increase possesses a scaling behavior: \Delta
T(\delta,\epsilon) is a function only of the ratio {\delta}/{\epsilon}. The
increase \Delta T({\delta}/{\epsilon}) is linear for small argument but becomes
exponential ~ exp({\delta}/2{\epsilon}) for {\delta}/{\epsilon} large.Comment: 19 pages, 4 eps figures, Accepted for publication in Philosophical
Transactions of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering
Science
Induced quantum dot probe for material characterization
We propose a non-destructive means of characterizing a semiconductor wafer via measuring parameters of an induced quantum dot on the material system of interest with a separate probe chip that can also house the measurement circuitry. We show that a single wire can create the dot, determine if an electron is present, and be used to measure critical device parameters. Adding more wires enables more complicated (potentially multi-dot) systems and measurements. As one application for this concept we consider silicon metal-oxide-semiconductor and silicon/silicon-germanium quantum dot qubits relevant to quantum computing and show how to measure low-lying excited states (so-called valley states). This approach provides an alternative method for characterization of parameters that are critical for various semiconductor-based quantum dot devices without fabricating such devices
Phonitons as a sound-based analogue of cavity quantum electrodynamics
A quantum mechanical superposition of a long-lived, localized phonon and a
matter excitation is described. We identify a realization in strained silicon:
a low-lying donor transition (P or Li) driven solely by acoustic phonons at
wavelengths where high-Q phonon cavities can be built. This phonon-matter
resonance is shown to enter the strongly coupled regime where the "vacuum" Rabi
frequency exceeds the spontaneous phonon emission into non-cavity modes, phonon
leakage from the cavity, and phonon anharmonicity and scattering. We introduce
a micropillar distributed Bragg reflector Si/Ge cavity, where Q=10^5-10^6 and
mode volumes V<=25*lambda^3 are reachable. These results indicate that single
or many-body devices based on these systems are experimentally realizable.Comment: Published PRL version. Note that the previous arXiv version has more
commentary, figures, etc. Also see http://research.tahan.com
Associations of physical activity, fitness, and body composition with heart rate variability-based indicators of stress and recovery on workdays : a cross-sectional study
BACKGROUND: The purpose of this study was to investigate how physical activity (PA), cardiorespiratory fitness (CRF), and body composition are associated with heart rate variability (HRV)-based indicators of stress and recovery on workdays. Additionally, we evaluated the association of objectively measured stress with self-reported burnout symptoms. METHODS: Participants of this cross-sectional study were 81 healthy males (age range 26-40 y). Stress and recovery on workdays were measured objectively based on HRV recordings. CRF and anthropometry were assessed in laboratory conditions. The level of PA was based on a detailed PA interview (MET index [MET-h/d]) and self-reported activity class. RESULTS: PA, CRF, and body composition were significantly associated with levels of stress and recovery on workdays. MET index (P < 0.001), activity class (P = 0.001), and CRF (P = 0.019) were negatively associated with stress during working hours whereas body fat percentage (P = 0.005) was positively associated. Overall, 27.5% of the variance of total stress on workdays (P = 0.001) was accounted for by PA, CRF, and body composition. Body fat percentage and body mass index were negatively associated with night-time recovery whereas CRF was positively associated. Objective work stress was associated (P = 0.003) with subjective burnout symptoms. CONCLUSIONS: PA, CRF, and body composition are associated with HRV-based stress and recovery levels, which needs to be taken into account in the measurement, prevention, and treatment of work-related stress. The HRV-based method used to determine work-related stress and recovery was associated with self-reported burnout symptoms, but more research on the clinical importance of the methodology is needed.Peer reviewe
Quantum feedback control of a solid-state qubit
We have studied theoretically the basic operation of a quantum feedback loop
designed to maintain a desired phase of quantum coherent oscillations in a
single solid-state qubit. The degree of oscillations synchronization with
external harmonic signal is calculated as a function of feedback strength,
taking into account available bandwidth and coupling to environment.
The feedback can efficiently suppress the dephasing of oscillations if the
qubit coupling to the detector is stronger than coupling to environment.Comment: Extended version of cond-mat/0107280 (5 pages, 5 figures); to be
published in PRB (RC
Quantum Zeno stabilization in weak continuous measurement of two qubits
We have studied quantum coherent oscillations of two qubits under continuous
measurement by a symmetrically coupled mesoscopic detector. The analysis is
based on a Bayesian formalism that is applicable to individual quantum systems.
Measurement continuously collapses the two-qubit system to one of the
sub-spaces of the Bell basis. For a detector with linear response this
corresponds to measurement of the total spin of the qubits. In the other
extreme of purely quadratic response the operator \sigma_y^1 \sigma_y^2 +
\sigma_z^1 \sigma_z^2 is measured. In both cases, collapse naturally leads to
spontaneous entanglement which can be identified by measurement of the power
spectrum and/or the average current of the detector. Asymmetry between the two
qubits results in evolution between the different measurement subspaces.
However, when the qubits are even weakly coupled to the detector, a kind of
quantum Zeno effect cancels the gradual evolution and replaces it with rare,
abrupt switching events. We obtain the asymptotic switching rates for these
events and confirm them with numerical simulations. We show how such switching
affects the observable power spectrum on different time scales.Comment: 18 pages, 8 eps figures, reference adde
Longitudinal coupling between a Si/SiGe quantum dot and an off-chip TiN resonator
Superconducting cavities have emerged as a key tool for measuring the spin
states of quantum dots. So far however, few experiments have explored
longitudinal couplings between dots and cavities, and no solid-state qubit
experiments have explicitly probed the "adiabatic" regime, where the Purcell
decay is strongly suppressed. Here, we report measurements of a quantum-dot
hybrid qubit coupled to a high-impedance resonator via a "flip-chip" design
geometry. By applying an ac drive to the qubit through two different channels,
and studying the effects of qubit energy detuning and interdot tunneling, we
are able to unequivocally confirm the presence of a longitudinal coupling
between the qubit and cavity. Since this coupling is proportional to the
driving amplitude, and is therefore switchable, it has the potential to become
a powerful new tool in qubit experiments.Comment: Main text and Supplementary Materials, 16 pages, 9 figure
Spectrum of qubit oscillations from Bloch equations
We have developed a formalism suitable for calculation of the output spectrum
of a detector continuously measuring quantum coherent oscillations in a
solid-state qubit, starting from microscopic Bloch equations. The results
coincide with that obtained using Bayesian and master equation approaches. The
previous results are generalized to the cases of arbitrary detector response
and finite detector temperature.Comment: 8 page
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