10,596 research outputs found
Spin swap vs. double occupancy in quantum gates
We propose an approach to realize quantum gates with electron spins localized
in a semiconductor that uses double occupancy to advantage. With a fast
(non-adiabatic) time control of the tunnelling, the probability of double
occupancy is first increased and then brought back exactly to zero. The quantum
phase built in this process can be exploited to realize fast quantum
operations. We illustrate the idea focusing on the half-swap operation, which
is the key two-qubit operation needed to build a CNOT gate.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
Variational Monte Carlo for spin-orbit interacting systems
Recently, a diffusion Monte Carlo algorithm was applied to the study of spin
dependent interactions in condensed matter. Following some of the ideas
presented therein, and applied to a Hamiltonian containing a Rashba-like
interaction, a general variational Monte Carlo approach is here introduced that
treats in an efficient and very accurate way the spin degrees of freedom in
atoms when spin orbit effects are included in the Hamiltonian describing the
electronic structure. We illustrate the algorithm on the evaluation of the
spin-orbit splittings of isolated carbon and lead atoms. In the case of the
carbon atom, we investigate the differences between the inclusion of spin-orbit
in its realistic and effective spherically symmetrized forms. The method
exhibits a very good accuracy in describing the small energy splittings,
opening the way for a systematic quantum Monte Carlo studies of spin-orbit
effects in atomic systems.Comment: 7 pages, 0 figure
A priori probability that a qubit-qutrit pair is separable
We extend to arbitrarily coupled pairs of qubits (two-state quantum systems)
and qutrits (three-state quantum systems) our earlier study (quant-ph/0207181),
which was concerned with the simplest instance of entangled quantum systems,
pairs of qubits. As in that analysis -- again on the basis of numerical
(quasi-Monte Carlo) integration results, but now in a still higher-dimensional
space (35-d vs. 15-d) -- we examine a conjecture that the Bures/SD (statistical
distinguishability) probability that arbitrarily paired qubits and qutrits are
separable (unentangled) has a simple exact value, u/(v Pi^3)= >.00124706, where
u = 2^20 3^3 5 7 and v = 19 23 29 31 37 41 43 (the product of consecutive
primes). This is considerably less than the conjectured value of the Bures/SD
probability, 8/(11 Pi^2) = 0736881, in the qubit-qubit case. Both of these
conjectures, in turn, rely upon ones to the effect that the SD volumes of
separable states assume certain remarkable forms, involving "primorial"
numbers. We also estimate the SD area of the boundary of separable qubit-qutrit
states, and provide preliminary calculations of the Bures/SD probability of
separability in the general qubit-qubit-qubit and qutrit-qutrit cases.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures, 2 tables, LaTeX, we utilize recent exact
computations of Sommers and Zyczkowski (quant-ph/0304041) of "the Bures
volume of mixed quantum states" to refine our conjecture
Molecular orbital calculations of two-electron states for P donor solid-state spin qubits
We theoretically study the Hilbert space structure of two neighbouring P
donor electrons in silicon-based quantum computer architectures. To use
electron spins as qubits, a crucial condition is the isolation of the electron
spins from their environment, including the electronic orbital degrees of
freedom. We provide detailed electronic structure calculations of both the
single donor electron wave function and the two-electron pair wave function. We
adopted a molecular orbital method for the two-electron problem, forming a
basis with the calculated single donor electron orbitals. Our two-electron
basis contains many singlet and triplet orbital excited states, in addition to
the two simple ground state singlet and triplet orbitals usually used in the
Heitler-London approximation to describe the two-electron donor pair wave
function. We determined the excitation spectrum of the two-donor system, and
study its dependence on strain, lattice position and inter donor separation.
This allows us to determine how isolated the ground state singlet and triplet
orbitals are from the rest of the excited state Hilbert space. In addition to
calculating the energy spectrum, we are also able to evaluate the exchange
coupling between the two donor electrons, and the double occupancy probability
that both electrons will reside on the same P donor. These two quantities are
very important for logical operations in solid-state quantum computing devices,
as a large exchange coupling achieves faster gating times, whilst the magnitude
of the double occupancy probability can affect the error rate.Comment: 15 pages (2-column
Exchange between deep donors in semiconductors: a quantum defect approach
Exchange interactions among defects in semiconductors are commonly treated
within effective-mass theory using a scaled hydrogenic wave-function. However
such a wave-function is only applicable to shallow impurities; here we present
a simple but robust generalization to treat deep donors, in which we treat the
long-range part of the wavefunction using the well established quantum defect
theory, and include a model central-cell correction to fix the bound-state
eigenvalue at the experimentally observed value. This allows us to compute the
effect of binding energy on exchange interactions as a function of donor
distance; this is a significant quantity given recent proposals to carry out
quantum information processing using deep donors. As expected, exchange
interactions are suppressed (or increased), compared to the hydrogenic case, by
the greater localization (or delocalization) of the wavefunctions of deep
donors (or `super-shallow' donors with binding energy less then the hydrogenic
value). The calculated results are compared with a simple scaling of the
Heitler-London hydrogenic exchange; the scaled hydrogenic results give the
correct order of magnitude but fail to reproduce quantitatively our
calculations. We calculate the donor exchange in silicon including inter-valley
interference terms for donor pairs along the direction, and also show
the influence of the donor type on the distribution of nearest-neighbour
exchange constants at different concentrations. Our methods can be used to
compute the exchange interactions between two donor electrons with arbitrary
binding energy.Comment: 11 pages, 10 figures, RevTeX
Energetics and performance of a microscopic heat engine based on exact calculations of work and heat distributions
We investigate a microscopic motor based on an externally controlled
two-level system. One cycle of the motor operation consists of two strokes.
Within each stroke, the two-level system is in contact with a given thermal
bath and its energy levels are driven with a constant rate. The time evolution
of the occupation probabilities of the two states are controlled by one rate
equation and represent the system's response with respect to the external
driving. We give the exact solution of the rate equation for the limit cycle
and discuss the emerging thermodynamics: the work done on the environment, the
heat exchanged with the baths, the entropy production, the motor's efficiency,
and the power output. Furthermore we introduce an augmented stochastic process
which reflects, at a given time, both the occupation probabilities for the two
states and the time spent in the individual states during the previous
evolution. The exact calculation of the evolution operator for the augmented
process allows us to discuss in detail the probability density for the
performed work during the limit cycle. In the strongly irreversible regime, the
density exhibits important qualitative differences with respect to the more
common Gaussian shape in the regime of weak irreversibility.Comment: 21 pages, 7 figure
Rapid, multiplexed microfluidic phage display
The development of a method for high-throughput, automated proteomic screening could impact areas ranging from fundamental molecular interactions to the discovery of novel disease markers and therapeutic targets. Surface display techniques allow for efficient handling of large molecular libraries in small volumes. In particular,
phage display has emerged as a powerful technology for selecting peptides and proteins with enhanced, target-specific binding affinities. Yet, the process becomes cumbersome and time-consuming when multiple targets are involved.Here we demonstrate for the first time a microfluidic chip capable of identifying high affinity phage displayed peptides for multiple targets in just a single round and without the need for bacterial infection. The chip is shown to be able to yield well-established control consensus sequences while simultaneously
identifying new sequences for clinically important targets.
Indeed, the confined parameters of the device allow not only for highly controlled assay conditions but also introduce a significant time-reduction to the phage display process. We anticipate that this easily-fabricated, disposable device has the potential to impact areas
ranging from fundamental studies of protein, peptide, and molecular interactions, to applications such as fully automated proteomic screening
Bures distance between two displaced thermal states
The Bures distance between two displaced thermal states and the corresponding
geometric quantities (statistical metric, volume element, scalar curvature) are
computed. Under nonunitary (dissipative) dynamics, the statistical distance
shows the same general features previously reported in the literature by
Braunstein and Milburn for two--state systems. The scalar curvature turns out
to have new interesting properties when compared to the curvature associated
with squeezed thermal states.Comment: 3 pages, RevTeX, no figure
Volume of the quantum mechanical state space
The volume of the quantum mechanical state space over -dimensional real,
complex and quaternionic Hilbert-spaces with respect to the canonical Euclidean
measure is computed, and explicit formulas are presented for the expected value
of the determinant in the general setting too. The case when the state space is
endowed with a monotone metric or a pull-back metric is considered too, we give
formulas to compute the volume of the state space with respect to the given
Riemannian metric. We present the volume of the space of qubits with respect to
various monotone metrics. It turns out that the volume of the space of qubits
can be infinite too. We characterize those monotone metrics which generates
infinite volume.Comment: 17 page
Ground state of two electrons on concentric spheres
We extend our analysis of two electrons on a sphere [Phys. Rev. A {\bf 79},
062517 (2009); Phys. Rev. Lett. {\bf 103}, 123008 (2009)] to electrons on
concentric spheres with different radii. The strengths and weaknesses of
several electronic structure models are analyzed, ranging from the mean-field
approximation (restricted and unrestricted Hartree-Fock solutions) to
configuration interaction expansion, leading to near-exact wave functions and
energies. The M{\o}ller-Plesset energy corrections (up to third-order) and the
asymptotic expansion for the large-spheres regime are also considered. We also
study the position intracules derived from approximate and exact wave
functions. We find evidence for the existence of a long-range Coulomb hole in
the large-spheres regime, and infer that unrestricted Hartree-Fock theory
over-localizes the electrons.Comment: 10 pages, 10 figure
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