880 research outputs found
Enhanced Resolution of Lossy Interferometry by Coherent Amplification of Single Photons
In the quantum sensing context most of the efforts to design novel quantum
techniques of sensing have been constrained to idealized, noise-free scenarios,
in which effects of environmental disturbances could be neglected. In this
work, we propose to exploit optical parametric amplification to boost
interferometry sensitivity in the presence of losses in a minimally invasive
scenario. By performing the amplification process on the microscopic probe
after the interaction with the sample, we can beat the losses detrimental
effect on the phase measurement which affects the single-photon state after its
interaction with the sample, and thus improve the achievable sensitivity.Comment: 4 + 3 pages, 3 + 5 figure
Quantum to classical transition via fuzzy measurements on high gain spontaneous parametric down-conversion
We consider the high gain spontaneous parametric down-conversion in a non
collinear geometry as a paradigmatic scenario to investigate the
quantum-to-classical transition by increasing the pump power, that is, the
average number of generated photons. The possibility of observing quantum
correlations in such macroscopic quantum system through dichotomic measurement
will be analyzed by addressing two different measurement schemes, based on
different dichotomization processes. More specifically, we will investigate the
persistence of non-locality in an increasing size n/2-spin singlet state by
studying the change in the correlations form as increases, both in the
ideal case and in presence of losses. We observe a fast decrease in the amount
of Bell's inequality violation for increasing system size. This theoretical
analysis is supported by the experimental observation of macro-macro
correlations with an average number of photons of about 10^3. Our results
enlighten the practical extreme difficulty of observing non-locality by
performing such a dichotomic fuzzy measurement.Comment: 15 pages, 18 figure
THE COMPLEX POINT CLOUD FOR THE KNOWLEDGE OF THE ARCHITECTURAL HERITAGE. SOME EXPERIENCES
The present paper aims to present a series of experiences and experimentations that a group of PhD from the University of Naples Federico II conducted over the past decade. This work has concerned the survey and the graphic restitution of monuments and works of art, finalized to their conservation. The targeted query of complex point cloud acquired by 3D scanners, integrated with photo sensors and thermal imaging, has allowed to explore new possibilities of investigation. In particular, we will present the scientific results of the experiments carried out on some important historical artifacts with distinct morphological and typological characteristics. According to aims and needs that emerged during the connotative process, with the support of archival and iconographic historical research, the laser scanner technology has been used in many different ways. New forms of representation, obtained directly from the point cloud, have been tested for the elaboration of thematic studies for documenting the pathologies and the decay of materials, for correlating visible aspects with invisible aspects of the artifact
Phase estimation via quantum interferometry for noisy detectors
The sensitivity in optical interferometry is strongly affected by losses
during the signal propagation or at the detection stage. The optimal quantum
states of the probing signals in the presence of loss were recently found.
However, in many cases of practical interest, their associated accuracy is
worse than the one obtainable without employing quantum resources (e.g.
entanglement and squeezing) but neglecting the detector's loss. Here we detail
an experiment that can reach the latter even in the presence of imperfect
detectors: it employs a phase-sensitive amplification of the signals after the
phase sensing, before the detection. We experimentally demonstrated the
feasibility of a phase estimation experiment able to reach its optimal working
regime. Since our method uses coherent states as input signals, it is a
practical technique that can be used for high-sensitivity interferometry and,
in contrast to the optimal strategies, does not require one to have an exact
characterization of the loss beforehand.Comment: 4 pages + supplementary information (10 pages), 3 + 4 figure
Solid friction between soft filaments
Any macroscopic deformation of a filamentous bundle is necessarily
accompanied by local sliding and/or stretching of the constituent filaments.
Yet the nature of the sliding friction between two aligned filaments
interacting through multiple contacts remains largely unexplored. Here, by
directly measuring the sliding forces between two bundled F-actin filaments, we
show that these frictional forces are unexpectedly large, scale logarithmically
with sliding velocity as in solid-like friction, and exhibit complex dependence
on the filaments' overlap length. We also show that a reduction of the
frictional force by orders of magnitude, associated with a transition from
solid-like friction to Stokes' drag, can be induced by coating F-actin with
polymeric brushes. Furthermore, we observe similar transitions in filamentous
microtubules and bacterial flagella. Our findings demonstrate how altering a
filament's elasticity, structure and interactions can be used to engineer
interfilament friction and thus tune the properties of fibrous composite
materials
Topological mechanics of origami and kirigami
Origami and kirigami have emerged as potential tools for the design of
mechanical metamaterials whose properties such as curvature, Poisson ratio, and
existence of metastable states can be tuned using purely geometric criteria. A
major obstacle to exploiting this property is the scarcity of tools to identify
and program the flexibility of fold patterns. We exploit a recent connection
between spring networks and quantum topological states to design origami with
localized folding motions at boundaries and study them both experimentally and
theoretically. These folding motions exist due to an underlying topological
invariant rather than a local imbalance between constraints and degrees of
freedom. We give a simple example of a quasi-1D folding pattern that realizes
such topological states. We also demonstrate how to generalize these
topological design principles to two dimensions. A striking consequence is that
a domain wall between two topologically distinct, mechanically rigid structures
is deformable even when constraints locally match the degrees of freedom.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures + ~5 pages S
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