1,838 research outputs found

    Optimal control of a qubit coupled to a non-Markovian environment

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    A central challenge for implementing quantum computing in the solid state is decoupling the qubits from the intrinsic noise of the material. We investigate the implementation of quantum gates for a paradigmatic, non-Markovian model: A single qubit coupled to a two-level system that is exposed to a heat bath. We systematically search for optimal pulses using a generalization of the novel open systems Gradient Ascent Pulse Engineering (GRAPE) algorithm. We show and explain that next to the known optimal bias point of this model, there are optimal shapes which refocus unwanted terms in the Hamiltonian. We study the limitations of controls set by the decoherence properties. This can lead to a significant improvement of quantum operations in hostile environments.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, improved pulse shape

    Domain wall in a chiral p-wave superconductor: a pathway for electrical current

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    Superconductors with p+ip pairing symmetry are characterized by chiral edge states, but these are difficult to detect in equilibrium since the resulting magnetic field is screened by the Meissner effect. Nonequilibrium detection is hindered by the fact that the edge excitations are unpaired Majorana fermions, which cannot transport charge near the Fermi level. Here we show that the boundary between p_x+ip_y and p_x-ip_y domains forms a one-way channel for electrical charge. We derive a product rule for the domain wall conductance, which allows to cancel the effect of a tunnel barrier between metal electrodes and superconductor and provides a unique signature of topological superconductors in the chiral p-wave symmetry class.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure

    Optimal control of time-dependent targets

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    In this work, we investigate how and to which extent a quantum system can be driven along a prescribed path in Hilbert space by a suitably shaped laser pulse. To calculate the optimal, i.e., the variationally best pulse, a properly defined functional is maximized. This leads to a monotonically convergent algorithm which is computationally not more expensive than the standard optimal-control techniques to push a system, without specifying the path, from a given initial to a given final state. The method is successfully applied to drive the time-dependent density along a given trajectory in real space and to control the time-dependent occupation numbers of a two-level system and of a one-dimensional model for the hydrogen atom.Comment: less typo

    Quantum Nondemolition-Like, Fast Measurement Scheme for a Superconducting Qubit

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    We present a measurement protocol for a flux qubit coupled to a dc-Superconducting QUantum Interference Device (SQUID), representative of any two-state system with a controllable coupling to an harmonic oscillator quadrature, which consists of two steps. First, the qubit state is imprinted onto the SQUID via a very short and strong interaction. We show that at the end of this step the qubit dephases completely, although the perturbation of the measured qubit observable during this step is weak. In the second step, information about the qubit is extracted by measuring the SQUID. This step can have arbitrarily long duration, since it no longer induces qubit errors

    Towards Using Probabilistic Models to Design Software Systems with Inherent Uncertainty

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    The adoption of machine learning (ML) components in software systems raises new engineering challenges. In particular, the inherent uncertainty regarding functional suitability and the operation environment makes architecture evaluation and trade-off analysis difficult. We propose a software architecture evaluation method called Modeling Uncertainty During Design (MUDD) that explicitly models the uncertainty associated to ML components and evaluates how it propagates through a system. The method supports reasoning over how architectural patterns can mitigate uncertainty and enables comparison of different architectures focused on the interplay between ML and classical software components. While our approach is domain-agnostic and suitable for any system where uncertainty plays a central role, we demonstrate our approach using as example a perception system for autonomous driving.Comment: Published at the European Conference on Software Architecture (ECSA

    SENSOR ARRAY ABLE TO DETECT AND RECOGNISE CHEMICAL WARFARE AGENTS

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    In this paper we studied a device based on array of six different sensors with surface acoustic wave for detections and recognition of three chemical warfare agents (chloropicrin, soman and lewisite). The sensors are “delay line” type with a center frequency of 69.4 MHz. It presents an original algorithm to identify the nature and concentration of gas from a finite range of possible gases. Numerical program developed to implement this algorithm, provides to operators all the particulars of gas and an indicator of credibility of the results provided as a measure of the degree of disturbance of the signals received from sensors.SAW, chemical warfare agent, array of sensors, algorithm

    Spectral measure of heavy tailed band and covariance random matrices

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    We study the asymptotic behavior of the appropriately scaled and possibly perturbed spectral measure ÎŒ\mu of large random real symmetric matrices with heavy tailed entries. Specifically, consider the N by N symmetric matrix YNσY_N^\sigma whose (i,j) entry is σ(i/N,j/N)Xij\sigma(i/N,j/N)X_{ij} where (Xij,0<i<j+1<∞)(X_{ij}, 0<i<j+1<\infty) is an infinite array of i.i.d real variables with common distribution in the domain of attraction of an α\alpha-stable law, 0<α<20<\alpha<2, and σ\sigma is a deterministic function. For a random diagonal DND_N independent of YNσY_N^\sigma and with appropriate rescaling aNa_N, we prove that the distribution ÎŒ\mu of aN−1YNσ+DNa_N^{-1}Y_N^\sigma + D_N converges in mean towards a limiting probability measure which we characterize. As a special case, we derive and analyze the almost sure limiting spectral density for empirical covariance matrices with heavy tailed entries.Comment: 31 pages, minor modifications, mainly in the regularity argument for Theorem 1.3. To appear in Communications in Mathematical Physic
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