323 research outputs found
Tomography of an optomechanical oscillator via parametrically amplified position measurement
We propose a protocol for quantum state tomography of nonclassical states in
optomechanical systems. Using a parametric drive, the procedure overcomes the
challenges of weak optomechanical coupling, poor detection efficiency, and
thermal noise to enable high efficiency homodyne measurement. Our analysis is
based on the analytic description of the generalized measurement that is
performed when optomechanical position measurement competes with thermal noise
and a parametric drive. The proposed experimental procedure is numerically
simulated in realistic parameter regimes, which allows us to show that
tomographic reconstruction of otherwise unverifiable nonclassical states is
made possible.Comment: 37 pages, 5 figures, comments welcome. Published versio
Gravitational-wave bursts and stochastic background from superfluid vortex avalanches during pulsar glitches
The current-quadrupole gravitational-wave signal emitted during the spin-up
phase of a pulsar glitch is calculated from first principles by modeling the
vortex dynamics observed in recent Gross-Pitaevskii simulations of pinned,
decelerating quantum condensates. Homogeneous and inhomogeneous unpinning
geometries, representing creep- and avalanche-like glitches, provide lower and
upper bounds on the gravitational wave signal strength respectively. The signal
arising from homogeneous glitches is found to scale with the square root of
glitch size, whereas the signal from inhomogeneous glitches scales proportional
to glitch size. The signal is also computed as a function of vortex travel
distance and stellar angular velocity. Convenient amplitude scalings are
derived as functions of these parameters. For the typical astrophysical
situation, where the glitch duration (in units of the spin period) is large
compared to the vortex travel distance (in units of the stellar radius), an
individual glitch from an object from Earth generates a wave
strain of , where is the average
distance travelled by a vortex during a glitch, is the
fractional glitch size, and is the pulsar angular velocity. The
non-detection of a signal from the 2006 Vela glitch in data from the fifth
science run conducted by the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave
Observatory implies that the glitch duration exceeds .
This represents the first observational lower bound on glitch duration to be
obtained.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRA
Engineering Quantum Jump Superoperators for Single Photon Detectors
We study the back-action of a single photon detector on the electromagnetic
field upon a photodetection by considering a microscopic model in which the
detector is constituted of a sensor and an amplification mechanism. Using the
quantum trajectories approach we determine the Quantum Jump Superoperator (QJS)
that describes the action of the detector on the field state immediately after
the photocount. The resulting QJS consists of two parts: the bright counts
term, representing the real photoabsorptions, and the dark counts term,
representing the amplification of intrinsic excitations inside the detector.
First we compare our results for the counting rates to experimental data,
showing a good agreement. Then we point out that by modifying the field
frequency one can engineer the form of QJS, obtaining the QJS's proposed
previously in an ad hoc manner
Stochastic simulations of conditional states of partially observed systems, quantum and classical
In a partially observed quantum or classical system the information that we
cannot access results in our description of the system becoming mixed even if
we have perfect initial knowledge. That is, if the system is quantum the
conditional state will be given by a state matrix and if classical
the conditional state will be given by a probability distribution
where is the result of the measurement. Thus to determine the evolution of
this conditional state under continuous-in-time monitoring requires an
expensive numerical calculation. In this paper we demonstrating a numerical
technique based on linear measurement theory that allows us to determine the
conditional state using only pure states. That is, our technique reduces the
problem size by a factor of , the number of basis states for the system.
Furthermore we show that our method can be applied to joint classical and
quantum systems as arises in modeling realistic measurement.Comment: 16 pages, 11 figure
Quantum trajectories for the realistic measurement of a solid-state charge qubit
We present a new model for the continuous measurement of a coupled quantum
dot charge qubit. We model the effects of a realistic measurement, namely
adding noise to, and filtering, the current through the detector. This is
achieved by embedding the detector in an equivalent circuit for measurement.
Our aim is to describe the evolution of the qubit state conditioned on the
macroscopic output of the external circuit. We achieve this by generalizing a
recently developed quantum trajectory theory for realistic photodetectors [P.
Warszawski, H. M. Wiseman and H. Mabuchi, Phys. Rev. A_65_ 023802 (2002)] to
treat solid-state detectors. This yields stochastic equations whose (numerical)
solutions are the ``realistic quantum trajectories'' of the conditioned qubit
state. We derive our general theory in the context of a low transparency
quantum point contact. Areas of application for our theory and its relation to
previous work are discussed.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figures. Shorter, significantly modified, updated versio
Observations of microglitches in HartRAO radio pulsars
A detailed observation of microglitch phenomenon in relatively slow radio
pulsars is presented. Our analyses for these small amplitude jumps in pulse
rotation frequency () and/or spin down rate () combine the
traditional manual detection method (which hinges on careful visual inspections
of the residuals of pulse phase residuals) and a new, and perhaps more
objective, automated search technique (which exploits the power of the
computer, rather than the eyes, for resolving discrete events in pulsar spin
parameters). The results of the analyses of a sample of 26 radio pulsars reveal
that: (i) only 20 pulsars exhibit significant fluctuations in their arrival
times to be considered suitable for meaningful microglitch analyses; (ii) a
phenomenal 299 microglitch events were identified in and/or :
266 of these events were found to be simultaneously significant in and
, while 19 and 14 were noticeable only in and ,
respectively; (iii) irrespective of sign, the microglitches have fractional
sizes which cover about 3 orders of magnitude in and
( and ) with median values as
and , respectively.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures, 2 Tables. Accepted for publication in Monthly
Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Main Journa
Superfluid vortex unpinning as a coherent noise process, and the scale invariance of pulsar glitches
The scale-invariant glitch statistics observed in individual pulsars
(exponential waiting-time and power-law size distributions) are consistent with
a critical self-organization process, wherein superfluid vortices pin
metastably in macroscopic domains and unpin collectively via nearest-neighbor
avalanches. Macroscopic inhomogeneity emerges naturally if pinning occurs at
crustal faults. If, instead, pinning occurs at lattice sites and defects, which
are macroscopically homogeneous, we show that an alternative, noncritical
self-organization process operates, termed coherent noise, wherein the global
Magnus force acts uniformly on vortices trapped in a range of pinning
potentials and undergoing thermal creep. It is found that vortices again unpin
collectively, but not via nearest-neighbor avalanches, and that,
counterintuitively, the resulting glitch sizes are scale invariant, in accord
with observational data. A mean-field analytic theory of the coherent noise
process, supported by Monte-Carlo simulations, yields a power-law size
distribution, between the smallest and largest glitch, with exponent in the
range . When the theory is fitted to data from the nine most
active pulsars, including the two quasiperiodic glitchers PSR J05376910 and
PSR J08354510, it directly constrains the distribution of pinning potentials
in the star, leading to two conclusions: (i) the potentials are broadly
distributed, with the mean comparable to the standard deviation; and (ii) the
mean potential decreases with characteristic age. An observational test is
proposed to discriminate between nearest-neighbor avalanches and coherent
noise.Comment: 39 pages, 11 figures. Accepted for publication in Ap
An analysis of the timing irregularities for 366 pulsars
We provide an analysis of timing irregularities observed for 366 pulsars.
Observations were obtained using the 76-m Lovell radio telescope at the Jodrell
Bank Observatory over the past 36 years. These data sets have allowed us to
carry out the first large-scale analysis of pulsar timing noise over time
scales of > 10yr, with multiple observing frequencies and for a large sample of
pulsars. Our sample includes both normal and recycled pulsars. The timing
residuals for the pulsars with the smallest characteristic ages are shown to be
dominated by the recovery from glitch events, whereas the timing irregularities
seen for older pulsars are quasi-periodic. We emphasise that previous models
that explained timing residuals as a low-frequency noise process are not
consistent with observation.Comment: Accepted by MNRAS. High resolution images available from the article
on AD
- …