5,481 research outputs found

    Universal Existence of Exact Quantum State Transmissions in Interacting Media

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    We consider an exact state transmission, where a density matrix in one information processor A at time t=0t=0 is exactly equal to that in another processor B at a later time. We demonstrate that there always exists a complete set of orthogonal states, which can be employed to perform the exact state transmission. Our result is very general in the sense that it holds for arbitrary media between the two processors and for any time interval. We illustrate our results in terms of models of spin, fermionic and bosonic chains. This complete set can be used as bases to study the perfect state transfer, which is associated with degenerated subspaces of this set of states. Interestingly, this formalism leads to a proposal of perfect state transfer via adiabatic passage, which does not depend on the specific form of the driving Hamiltonian.Comment: 4 pages, no figur

    Cylindrical Cloak with Axial Permittivity/Permeability Spatially Invariant

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    In order to reduce the difficulties in the experimental realizations of the cloak but still keep good performance of invisibility, we proposed a perfect cylindrical invisibility cloak with spatially invariant axial material parameters. The advantage of this kind of TE (or TM) cloak is that only rho and phi components of mu (or epsilon) are spatially variant, which makes it possible to realize perfect invisibility with two-dimensional (2D) magnetic (or electric) metamaterials. The effects of perturbations of the parameters on the performance of this cloak are quantitatively analyzed by scattering theory. Our work provides a simple and feasible solution to the experimental realization of cloaks with ideal parameters

    Schwinger boson mean field theory of the Heisenberg Ferrimagnetic Spin Chain

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    The Schwinger boson mean field theory is applied to the quantum ferrimagnetic Heisenberg chain. There is a ferrimagnetic long range order in the ground state. We observe two branches of the low lying excitation and calculate the spin reduction, the gap of the antiferromagnetic branch, and the spin fluctuation at T=0KT=0K. These results agree with the established numerical results quite well. At finite temperatures, the long range order is destroyed because of the disappearance of the Bose condensation. The thermodynamic observables, such as the free energy, magnetic susceptibility, specific heat, and the spin correlation at T>0KT>0K, are calculated. The TχuniT\chi_{uni} has a minimum at intermediate temperatures and the spin correlation length behaves as T−1T^{-1} at low temperatures. These qualitatively agree with the numerical results and the difference is small at low temperatures.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figures. Accepted by Phys. Rev.
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