1,369 research outputs found
Superconducting fluctuations and characteristic time scales in amorphous WSi
We study magnitudes and temperature dependences of the electron-electron and
electron-phonon interaction times which play the dominant role in the formation
and relaxation of photon induced hotspot in two dimensional amorphous WSi
films. The time constants are obtained through magnetoconductance measurements
in perpendicular magnetic field in the superconducting fluctuation regime and
through time-resolved photoresponse to optical pulses. The excess
magnetoconductivity is interpreted in terms of the weak-localization effect and
superconducting fluctuations. Aslamazov-Larkin, and Maki-Thompson
superconducting fluctuation alone fail to reproduce the magnetic field
dependence in the relatively high magnetic field range when the temperature is
rather close to Tc because the suppression of the electronic density of states
due to the formation of short lifetime Cooper pairs needs to be considered. The
time scale {\tau}_i of inelastic scattering is ascribed to a combination of
electron-electron ({\tau}_(e-e)) and electron-phonon ({\tau}_(e-ph))
interaction times, and a characteristic electron-fluctuation time
({\tau}_(e-fl)), which makes it possible to extract their magnitudes and
temperature dependences from the measured {\tau}_i. The ratio of
phonon-electron ({\tau}_(ph-e)) and electron-phonon interaction times is
obtained via measurements of the optical photoresponse of WSi microbridges.
Relatively large {\tau}_(e-ph)/{\tau}_(ph-e) and {\tau}_(e-ph)/{\tau}_(e-e)
ratios ensure that in WSi the photon energy is more efficiently confined in the
electron subsystem than in other materials commonly used in the technology of
superconducting nanowire single-photon detectors (SNSPDs). We discuss the
impact of interaction times on the hotspot dynamics and compare relevant
metrics of SNSPDs from different materials
Single-shot quantum memory advantage in the simulation of stochastic processes
Stochastic processes underlie a vast range of natural and social phenomena.
Some processes such as atomic decay feature intrinsic randomness, whereas other
complex processes, e.g. traffic congestion, are effectively probabilistic
because we cannot track all relevant variables. To simulate a stochastic
system's future behaviour, information about its past must be stored and thus
memory is a key resource. Quantum information processing promises a memory
advantage for stochastic simulation that has been validated in recent
proof-of-concept experiments. Yet, in all past works, the memory saving would
only become accessible in the limit of a large number of parallel simulations,
because the memory registers of individual quantum simulators had the same
dimensionality as their classical counterparts. Here, we report the first
experimental demonstration that a quantum stochastic simulator can encode the
relevant information in fewer dimensions than any classical simulator, thereby
achieving a quantum memory advantage even for an individual simulator. Our
photonic experiment thus establishes the potential of a new, practical resource
saving in the simulation of complex systems
Heralded quantum steering over a high-loss channel
Entanglement is the key resource for many long-range quantum information
tasks, including secure communication and fundamental tests of quantum physics.
These tasks require robust verification of shared entanglement, but performing
it over long distances is presently technologically intractable because the
loss through an optical fiber or free-space channel opens up a detection
loophole. We design and experimentally demonstrate a scheme that verifies
entanglement in the presence of at least dB of added loss,
equivalent to approximately km of telecommunication fiber. Our protocol
relies on entanglement swapping to herald the presence of a photon after the
lossy channel, enabling event-ready implementation of quantum steering. This
result overcomes the key barrier in device-independent communication under
realistic high-loss scenarios and in the realization of a quantum repeater.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure
Trap-Integrated Superconducting Nanowire Single-Photon Detectors with Improved RF Tolerance for Trapped-Ion Qubit State Readout
State readout of trapped-ion qubits with trap-integrated detectors can
address important challenges for scalable quantum computing, but the strong rf
electric fields used for trapping can impact detector performance. Here, we
report on NbTiN superconducting nanowire single-photon detectors (SNSPDs)
employing grounded aluminum mirrors as electrical shielding that are integrated
into linear surface-electrode rf ion traps. The shielded SNSPDs can be
successfully operated at applied rf trapping potentials of up to
at and temperatures of up to
, with a maximum system detection efficiency of
. This performance should be sufficient to enable parallel
high-fidelity state readout of a wide range of trapped ion species in typical
cryogenic apparatus.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures. The following article has been submitted to
Applied Physics Letter
- …