9,909 research outputs found

    Implications of surface noise for the motional coherence of trapped ions

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    Electric noise from metallic surfaces is a major obstacle towards quantum applications with trapped ions due to motional heating of the ions. Here, we discuss how the same noise source can also lead to pure dephasing of motional quantum states. The mechanism is particularly relevant at small ion-surface distances, thus imposing a new constraint on trap miniaturization. By means of a free induction decay experiment, we measure the dephasing time of the motion of a single ion trapped 50~Ό\mum above a Cu-Al surface. From the dephasing times we extract the integrated noise below the secular frequency of the ion. We find that none of the most commonly discussed surface noise models for ion traps describes both, the observed heating as well as the measured dephasing, satisfactorily. Thus, our measurements provide a benchmark for future models for the electric noise emitted by metallic surfaces.Comment: (5 pages, 4 figures

    Shear-Flow Driven Current Filamentation: Two-Dimensional Magnetohydrodynamic Simulations

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    The process of current filamentation in permanently externally driven, initially globally ideal plasmas is investigated by means of two-dimensional Magnetohydrodynamic (MHD)-simulations. This situation is typical for astrophysical systems like jets, the interstellar and intergalactic medium where the dynamics is dominated by external forces. Two different cases are studied. In one case, the system is ideal permanently and dissipative processes are excluded. In the second case, a system with a current density dependent resistivity is considered. This resistivity is switched on self-consistently in current filaments and allows for local dissipation due to magnetic reconnection. Thus one finds tearing of current filaments and, besides, merging of filaments due to coalescence instabilities. Energy input and dissipation finally balance each other and the system reaches a state of constant magnetic energy in time.Comment: 32 Pages, 13 Figures. accepted, to appear in Physics of Plasmas (049012

    Beyond the pale?: the implications of the RSLG Report for non-CURL modern university libraries: Perspectives on the support libraries group: Final report

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    We have shown that the cluster-mass reconstruction method which combines strong and weak gravitational lensing data, developed in the first paper in the series, successfully reconstructs the mass distribution of a simulated cluster. In this paper we apply the method to the ground-based high-quality multi-colour data of RX J1347.5-114

    Process tomography of ion trap quantum gates

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    A crucial building block for quantum information processing with trapped ions is a controlled-NOT quantum gate. In this paper, two different sequences of laser pulses implementing such a gate operation are analyzed using quantum process tomography. Fidelities of up to 92.6(6)% are achieved for single gate operations and up to 83.4(8)% for two concatenated gate operations. By process tomography we assess the performance of the gates for different experimental realizations and demonstrate the advantage of amplitude--shaped laser pulses over simple square pulses. We also investigate whether the performance of concatenated gates can be inferred from the analysis of the single gates

    Disrupted seasonal clockwork in the population dynamics of a freshwater copepod by climate warming

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    Life history responses are expected to accompany climate warming, yet little is known how long-term effects of climate and environmental change affect the seasonal dynamics of planktonic organisms. We used an historical data set from Lake Washington (U.S.A.) to quantify population responses of a calanoid copepod (Leptodiaptomus ashlandi) to long-term changes in temperature and resource availability and explore potential mechanisms for the responses. Increasing water temperatures (annual mean increase of 1.5 degrees C in the upper 10-m water volume) and longer stratification periods (about 4 weeks) were observed between 1962 and 2005, coincident with a pronounced decline in Leptodiaptomus densities. However, production was maintained because of an increase in the production to biomass ratio and a life cycle shift in Leptodiaptomus from an annual to a 6-month cycle. Cross-wavelet analyses demonstrated that the annual thermal forcing of copepod recruitment observed during the first two decades of the study weakened substantially, leading to more stochastic population dynamics during the past two decades. This shift from one to two generations per year was most likely produced by a longer and warmer growing period combined with changing fluctuations in resource (phytoplankton) availability. Climate change can lead to higher-frequency voltinism in ectothermic organisms and to temporal reorganization of their population dynamics

    Detection of an X-Ray Hot Region in the Virgo Cluster of Galaxies with ASCA

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    Based on mapping observations with ASCA, an unusual hot region with a spatial extent of 1 square degree was discovered between M87 and M49 at a center coordinate of R. A. = 12h 27m 36s and Dec. = 9∘18â€Č9^\circ18' (J2000). The X-ray emission from the region has a 2-10 keV flux of 1×10−111 \times 10^{-11} ergs s−1^{-1} cm−2^{-2} and a temperature of kT≳4kT \gtrsim 4 keV, which is significantly higher than that in the surrounding medium of ∌2\sim 2 keV. The internal thermal energy in the hot region is estimated to be VnkT∌1060V n k T \sim 10^{60} ergs with a gas density of ∌10−4\sim 10^{-4} cm−3^{-3}. A power-law spectrum with a photon index 1.7−2.31.7-2.3 is also allowed by the data. The hot region suggests there is an energy input due to a shock which is probably caused by the motion of the gas associated with M49, infalling toward the M87 cluster with a velocity ≳1000\gtrsim 1000 km s−1^{-1}.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures, accepted to ApJ

    Concentration analysis and cocompactness

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    Loss of compactness that occurs in may significant PDE settings can be expressed in a well-structured form of profile decomposition for sequences. Profile decompositions are formulated in relation to a triplet (X,Y,D)(X,Y,D), where XX and YY are Banach spaces, Xâ†ȘYX\hookrightarrow Y, and DD is, typically, a set of surjective isometries on both XX and YY. A profile decomposition is a representation of a bounded sequence in XX as a sum of elementary concentrations of the form gkwg_kw, gk∈Dg_k\in D, w∈Xw\in X, and a remainder that vanishes in YY. A necessary requirement for YY is, therefore, that any sequence in XX that develops no DD-concentrations has a subsequence convergent in the norm of YY. An imbedding Xâ†ȘYX\hookrightarrow Y with this property is called DD-cocompact, a property weaker than, but related to, compactness. We survey known cocompact imbeddings and their role in profile decompositions

    Electronic and phononic properties of the chalcopyrite CuGaS2

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    The availability of ab initio electronic calculations and the concomitant techniques for deriving the corresponding lattice dynamics have been profusely used for calculating thermodynamic and vibrational properties of semiconductors, as well as their dependence on isotopic masses. The latter have been compared with experimental data for elemental and binary semiconductors with different isotopic compositions. Here we present theoretical and experimental data for several vibronic and thermodynamic properties of CuGa2, a canonical ternary semiconductor of the chalcopyrite family. Among these properties are the lattice parameters, the phonon dispersion relations and densities of states (projected on the Cu, Ga, and S constituents), the specific heat and the volume thermal expansion coefficient. The calculations were performed with the ABINIT and VASP codes within the LDA approximation for exchange and correlation and the results are compared with data obtained on samples with the natural isotope composition for Cu, Ga and S, as well as for isotope enriched samples.Comment: 9 pages, 8 Figures, submitted to Phys. Rev
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