23 research outputs found
A mechanical switch for state transfer in dual cavity optomechanical systems
Dual cavity opto-electromechanical systems (OEMS) are those where two
electromagnetic cavities are connected by a common mechanical spring. These
systems have been shown to facilitate high fidelity quantum state transfer from
one cavity to another. In this paper, we explicitly calculate the effect on the
fidelity of state transfer, when an additional spring is attached to only one
of the cavities. Our quantitative estimates of loss of fidelity, highlight the
sensitivity of dual cavity OEMS when it couples to additional mechanical modes.
We show that this sensitivity can be used to design an effective mechanical
switch, for inhibition or high fidelity transmission of quantum states between
the cavities.Comment: Accepted in Physical Review
An Efficient Quantum Algorithm and Circuit to Generate Eigenstates of SU(2) and SU(3) Representations
This thesis presents an efficient quantum algorithm and explicit circuits for
generating eigenstates of arbitrary SU(2) and SU(3) representations. These
include a wide variety of highly entangled states. The algorithm uses Schur
transform that rotates the input computational basis states to the output Schur
basis states with resources polynomial in number of qudits n. Using the fact
that quantum logic is reversible, we accomplish the desired result using the
inverse Schur transform. The algorithm can be easily generalized to any
arbitrary higher groups.Comment: Empty spaces in the document can be ignored. All information as
author intended is available in this documen
Measuring laser carrier-envelope-phase effects in the noble gases with an atomic hydrogen calibration standard
We present accurate measurements of carrier-envelope-phase effects on ionization of the noble gases with few-cycle laser pulses. The experimental apparatus is calibrated by using atomic hydrogen data to remove any systematic offsets and thereby obtain accurate CEP data on other generally used noble gases such as Ar, Kr, and Xe. Experimental results for H are well supported by exact time-dependent Schrödinger equation theoretical simulations; however, significant differences are observed in the case of the noble gases.Griffith Sciences, School of Natural SciencesFull Tex
Attosecond angular streaking and tunnelling time in atomic hydrogen
Tunnelling, one of the key features of quantum mechanics, ignited an ongoing
debate about the value, meaning and interpretation of 'tunnelling time'. Until
recently the debate was purely theoretical, with the process considered to be
instantaneous for all practical purposes. This changed with the development of
ultrafast lasers and in particular, the 'attoclock' technique that is used to
probe the attosecond dynamics of electrons. Although the initial attoclock
measurements hinted at instantaneous tunnelling, later experiments contradicted
those findings, claiming to have measured finite tunnelling times. In each case
these measurements were performed with multi-electron atoms. Atomic hydrogen
(H), the simplest atomic system with a single electron, can be 'exactly'
(subject only to numerical limitations) modelled using numerical solutions of
the 3D-TDSE with measured experimental parameters and acts as a convenient
benchmark for both accurate experimental measurements and calculations. Here we
report the first attoclock experiment performed on H and find that our
experimentally determined offset angles are in excellent agreement with
accurate 3D-TDSE simulations performed using our experimental pulse parameters.
The same simulations with a short-range Yukawa potential result in zero offset
angles for all intensities. We conclude that the offset angle measured in the
attoclock experiments originates entirely from electron scattering by the
long-range Coulomb potential with no contribution from tunnelling time delay.
That conclusion is supported by empirical observation that the electron offset
angles follow closely the simple formula for the deflection angle of electrons
undergoing classical Rutherford scattering by the Coulomb potential. Thus we
confirm that, in H, tunnelling is instantaneous (with an upperbound of 1.8 as)
within our experimental and numerical uncertainty.Comment: 7 figure