901 research outputs found
Characterizing Nonclassical Correlations via Local Quantum Uncertainty
Quantum mechanics predicts that measurements of incompatible observables
carry a minimum uncertainty which is independent of technical deficiencies of
the measurement apparatus or incomplete knowledge of the state of the system.
Nothing yet seems to prevent a single physical quantity, such as one spin
component, from being measured with arbitrary precision. Here we show that an
intrinsic quantum uncertainty on a single observable is ineludible in a number
of physical situations. When revealed on local observables of a bipartite
system, such uncertainty defines an entire class of bona fide measures of
nonclassical correlations. For the case of 2 x d systems, we find that a unique
measure is defined, which we evaluate in closed form. We then discuss the role
that these correlations, which are of the 'discord' type, can play in the
context of quantum metrology. We show in particular that the amount of discord
present in a bipartite mixed probe state guarantees a minimum precision, as
quantified by the quantum Fisher information, in the optimal phase estimation
protocol.Comment: Published in PRL, Editors' Suggestio
Non-Markovianity of a quantum emitter in front of a mirror
We consider a quantum emitter ("atom") radiating in a one-dimensional (1D)
photonic waveguide in the presence of a single mirror, resulting in a delay
differential equation for the atomic amplitude. We carry out a systematic
analysis of the non-Markovian (NM) character of the atomic dynamics in terms of
refined, recently developed notions of quantum non-Markovianity such as
indivisibility and information back-flow. NM effects are quantified as a
function of the round-trip time and phase shift associated with the atom-mirror
optical path. We find, in particular, that unless an atom-photon bound state is
formed a finite time delay is always required in order for NM effects to be
exhibited. This identifies a finite threshold in the parameter space, which
separates the Markovian and non-Markovian regimes.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures. Fig. 3 featured in Phys. Rev. A Kaleidoscope
Images: July 201
DNMTs are required for delayed genome instability caused by radiation
This is an open-access article licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 Unported License. The article may be redistributed, reproduced, and reused for non-commercial purposes, provided the original source is properly cited - Copyright @ 2012 Landes Bioscience.The ability of ionizing radiation to initiate genomic instability has been harnessed in the clinic where the localized delivery of controlled doses of radiation is used to induce cell death in tumor cells. Though very effective as a therapy, tumor relapse can occur in vivo and its appearance has been attributed to the radio-resistance of cells with stem cell-like features. The molecular mechanisms underlying these phenomena are unclear but there is evidence suggesting an inverse correlation between radiation-induced genomic instability and global hypomethylation. To further investigate the relationship between DNA hypomethylation, radiosensitivity and genomic stability in stem-like cells we have studied mouse embryonic stem cells containing differing levels of DNA methylation due to the presence or absence of DNA methyltransferases. Unexpectedly, we found that global levels of methylation do not determine radiosensitivity. In particular, radiation-induced delayed genomic instability was observed at the Hprt gene locus only in wild-type cells. Furthermore, absence of Dnmt1 resulted in a 10-fold increase in de novo Hprt mutation rate, which was unaltered by radiation. Our data indicate that functional DNMTs are required for radiation-induced genomic instability, and that individual DNMTs play distinct roles in genome stability. We propose that DNMTS may contribute to the acquirement of radio-resistance in stem-like cells.This study is funded by NOTE, BBSRC and the Royal Society Dorothy Hodgkin Research Fellowship
Input-output Gaussian channels: theory and application
Setting off from the classic input-output formalism, we develop a theoretical
framework to characterise the Gaussian quantum channels relating the initial
correlations of an open bosonic system to those of properly identified output
modes. We then proceed to apply our formalism to the case of quantum harmonic
oscillators, such as the motional degrees of freedom of trapped ions or
nanomechanical oscillators, interacting with travelling electromagnetic modes
through cavity fields and subject to external white noise. Thus, we determine
the degree of squeezing that can be transferred from an intra-cavity oscillator
to light, and also show that the intra-cavity squeezing can be transformed into
distributed optical entanglement if one can access both output fields of a
two-sided cavity.Comment: 13+7 pages, 3 figure
The geometric approach to quantum correlations: Computability versus reliability
We propose a modified metric based on the Hilbert-Schmidt norm and adopt it
to define a rescaled version of the geometric measure of quantum discord. Such
a measure is found not to suffer from the pathological dependence on state
purity. Although the employed metric is still noncontractive under quantum
operations, we show that the resulting indicator of quantum correlations is in
agreement with other bona fide discord measures in a number of physical
examples. We present a critical assessment of the requirements of reliability
versus computability when approaching the task of quantifying, or measuring,
general quantum correlations in a bipartite state.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figures; presentation improved; to appear in J. Phys.
Signatures of the term in ultrastrongly-coupled oscillators
We study a bosonic matter excitation coupled to a single-mode cavity field
via electric dipole. Counter-rotating and terms are included in the
interaction model, being the vector potential of the cavity
field. In the ultrastrong coupling regime the vacuum of the bare modes is no
longer the ground state of the Hamiltonian and contains a nonzero population of
polaritons, the true normal modes of the system. If the parameters of the model
satisfy the Thomas-Reiche-Kuhn sum rule, we find that the two polaritons are
always equally populated. We show how this prediction could be tested in a
quenching experiment, by rapidly switching on the coupling and analyzing the
radiation emitted by the cavity. A refinement of the model based on a
microscopic minimal coupling Hamiltonian is also provided, and its consequences
on our results are characterized analytically.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figure
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