3,075 research outputs found
Deterministic amplification of Schroedinger cat states in circuit quantum electrodynamics
We propose a dynamical scheme for deterministically amplifying photonic
Schroedinger cat states based on a set of optimal state-transfers. The scheme
can be implemented in strongly coupled qubit-cavity systems and is well suited
to the capabilities of state of the art superconducting circuits. The ideal
analytical scheme is compared with a full simulation of the open
Jaynes-Cummings model with realistic device parameters. This amplification tool
can be utilized for practical quantum information processing in non-classical
continuous-variable states.Comment: A revised manuscript has 6 figure
Engineering entanglement for metrology with rotating matter waves
Entangled states of rotating, trapped ultracold bosons form a very promising scenario for quantum metrology. In order to employ such states for metrology, it is vital to understand their detailed form and the enhanced accuracy with which they could measure phase, in this case generated through rotation. In this work, we study the rotation of ultracold bosons in an asymmetric trapping potential beyond the lowest Landau level (LLL) approximation. We demonstrate that while the LLL can identify reasonably the critical frequency for a quantum phase transition and entangled state generation, it is vital to go beyond the LLL to identify the details of the state and quantify the quantum Fisher information (which bounds the accuracy of the phase measurement). We thus identify a new parameter regime for useful entangled state generation, amenable to experimental investigation
Burton L. Spiller Correspondence
Entries include typed correspondence with Miss Louise Harris of the C.A. Stephens Collection at Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island, with hopes of book gifts for the Maine Author Collection, a typed reply from Surprenant representing Miss Harris with respect to the practicability of providing gift contributions of books for collections on Brown University, Bookstore, stationery, and the typed regrets of Jacob at the Maine State Library
Quantum-enhanced gyroscopy with rotating anisotropic Bose–Einstein condensates
High-precision gyroscopes are a key component of inertial navigation systems. By considering matter wave gyroscopes that make use of entanglement it should be possible to gain some advantages in terms of sensitivity, size, and resources used over unentangled optical systems. In this paper we consider the details of such a quantum-enhanced atom interferometry scheme based on atoms trapped in a carefully-chosen rotating trap. We consider all the steps: entanglement generation, phase imprinting, and read-out of the signal and show that quantum enhancement should be possible in principle. While the improvement in performance over equivalent unentangled schemes is small, our feasibility study opens the door to further developments and improvements
Efficient optical quantum information processing
Quantum information offers the promise of being able to perform certain
communication and computation tasks that cannot be done with conventional
information technology (IT). Optical Quantum Information Processing (QIP) holds
particular appeal, since it offers the prospect of communicating and computing
with the same type of qubit. Linear optical techniques have been shown to be
scalable, but the corresponding quantum computing circuits need many auxiliary
resources. Here we present an alternative approach to optical QIP, based on the
use of weak cross-Kerr nonlinearities and homodyne measurements. We show how
this approach provides the fundamental building blocks for highly efficient
non-absorbing single photon number resolving detectors, two qubit parity
detectors, Bell state measurements and finally near deterministic control-not
(CNOT) gates. These are essential QIP devicesComment: Accepted to the Journal of optics B special issue on optical quantum
computation; References update
Entanglement of superconducting charge qubits by homodyne measurement
We present a scheme by which projective homodyne measurement of a microwave
resonator can be used to generate entanglement between two superconducting
charge qubits coupled to this resonator. The non-interacting qubits are
initialised in a product of their ground states, the resonator is initialised
in a coherent field state, and the state of the system is allowed to evolve
under a rotating wave Hamiltonian. Making a homodyne measurement on the
resonator at a given time projects the qubits into an state of the form (|gg> +
exp(-i phi)|ee>)/sqrt(2). This protocol can produce states with a fidelity as
high as required, with a probability approaching 0.5. Although the system
described is one that can be used to display revival in the qubit oscillations,
we show that the entanglement procedure works at much shorter timescales.Comment: 17 pages, 7 figure
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