177 research outputs found
Stationary optomagnonic entanglement and magnon-to-optics quantum state transfer via opto-magnomechanics
We show how to prepare a steady-state entangled state between magnons and
optical photons in an opto-magnomechanical configuration, where a mechanical
vibration mode couples to a magnon mode in a ferrimagnet by the dispersive
magnetostrictive interaction, and to an optical cavity by the radiation
pressure. We find that, by appropriately driving the magnon mode and the cavity
to simultaneously activate the magnomechanical Stokes and the optomechanical
anti-Stokes scattering, a stationary optomagnonic entangled state can be
created. We further show that, by activating the magnomechanical state-swap
interaction and subsequently sending a weak red-detuned optical pulse to drive
the cavity, the magnonic state can be read out in the cavity output field of
the pulse via the mechanical transduction. The demonstrated entanglement and
state-readout protocols in such a novel opto-magnomechanical configuration
allow us to optically control, prepare, and read out quantum states of
collective spin excitations in solids, and provide promising opportunities for
the study of quantum magnonics, macroscopic quantum states, and magnonic
quantum information processing.Comment: Accepted to Quantum Sci. Techno
Entangling ferrimagnetic magnons with an atomic ensemble via opto-magnomechanics
We show how to prepare macroscopic entanglement between an atomic ensemble
and a large number of magnons in a ferrimagnetic YIG crystal. Specifically, we
adopt an opto-magnomechanical configuration where the magnetostriction-induced
magnomechanical displacement couples to an optical cavity via radiation
pressure, and the latter further couples to an ensemble of two-level atoms that
are placed inside the cavity. We show that by properly driving the cavity and
magnon modes, optomechanical entanglement is created which is further
distributed to the atomic and magnonic systems, yielding stationary
entanglement between atoms and magnons. The atom-magnon entanglement is a
result of the combined effect of opto- and magnomechanical cooling and
optomechanical parametric down-conversion interactions. A competition mechanism
between two mechanical cooling channels is revealed. We further show that
genuine tripartite entanglement of three massive subsystems, i.e., atoms,
magnons and phonons, can also be achieved in the same system. Our results
indicate that the hybrid opto-magnomechanical system may become a promising
system for preparing macroscopic quantum states involving magnons, photons,
phonons and atoms
Entangling Two Bosonic Polaritons via Dispersive Coupling with a Third Mode
We provide a general mechanism of entangling two strongly-coupled bosonic
systems that form two hybridized (polariton) modes. This is realized by
dispersively coupling with a third bosonic mode. Stationary entanglement is
achieved when the two hybridized modes are respectively resonant with the
sidebands of the drive field scattered by the third mode and when the weights
of the two bosonic modes in the two polaritons are appropriately chosen. The
entanglement is robust against dissipations of the system and bath temperature.
The entanglement theory is quite general and applicable to a variety of bosonic
systems, such as cavity magnomechanical and exciton-photon-phonon systems
Cavity magnomechanics: from classical to quantum
Hybrid quantum systems based on magnons in magnetic materials have made
significant progress in the past decade. They are built based on the couplings
of magnons with microwave photons, optical photons, vibration phonons, and
superconducting qubits. In particular, the interactions among magnons,
microwave cavity photons, and vibration phonons form the system of cavity
magnomechanics (CMM), which lies in the interdisciplinary field of cavity QED,
magnonics, quantum optics, and quantum information. Here, we review the
experimental and theoretical progress of this emerging field. We first
introduce the underlying theories of the magnomechanical coupling, and then
some representative classical phenomena that have been experimentally observed,
including magnomechanically induced transparency, magnomechanical dynamical
backactions, magnon-phonon cross-Kerr nonlinearity, etc. We also discuss a
number of theoretical proposals, which show the potential of the CMM system for
preparing different kinds of quantum states of magnons, phonons, and photons,
and hybrid systems combining magnomechanics and optomechanics and relevant
quantum protocols based on them. Finally, we summarize this review and provide
an outlook for the future research directions in this field.Comment: Review article, 42 pages, 16 figure
Time-reversal symmetry breaking driven topological phase transition in EuB
The interplay between time-reversal symmetry (TRS) and band topology plays a
crucial role in topological states of quantum matter. In
time-reversal-invariant (TRI) systems, the inversion of spin-degenerate bands
with opposite parity leads to nontrivial topological states, such as
topological insulators and Dirac semimetals. When the TRS is broken, the
exchange field induces spin splitting of the bands. The inversion of a pair of
spin-splitting subbands can generate more exotic topological states, such as
quantum anomalous Hall insulators and magnetic Weyl semimetals. So far, such
topological phase transitions driven by the TRS breaking have not been
visualized. In this work, using angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy, we
have demonstrated that the TRS breaking induces a band inversion of a pair of
spin-splitting subbands at the TRI points of Brillouin zone in EuB, when a
long-range ferromagnetic order is developed. The dramatic changes in the
electronic structure result in a topological phase transition from a TRI
ordinary insulator state to a TRS-broken topological semimetal (TSM) state.
Remarkably, the magnetic TSM state has an ideal electronic structure, in which
the band crossings are located at the Fermi level without any interference from
other bands. Our findings not only reveal the topological phase transition
driven by the TRS breaking, but also provide an excellent platform to explore
novel physical behavior in the magnetic topological states of quantum matter.Comment: 22 pages, 7 figures, accepted by Phys. Rev.
Inhibition of UGT1A1 by natural and synthetic flavonoids
Flavonoids are widely distributed phytochemicals in vegetables, fruits and medicinal plants. Recent studies demonstrate that some natural flavonoids are potent inhibitors of the human UDP-glucuronosyltransferase 1A1 (UGT1A1), a key enzyme in detoxification of endogenous harmful compounds such as bilirubin. In this study, the inhibitory effects of 56 natural and synthetic flavonoids on UGT1A1 were assayed, while the structure–inhibition relationships of flavonoids as UGT1A1 inhibitors were investigated. The results demonstrated that the C-3 and C-7 hydroxyl groups on the flavone skeleton would enhance UGT1A1 inhibition, while flavonoid glycosides displayed weaker inhibitory effects than their corresponding aglycones. Further investigation on inhibition kinetics of two strong flavonoid-type UGT1A1 inhibitors, acacetin and kaempferol, yielded interesting results. Both flavonoids were competitive inhibitors against UGT1A1-mediated NHPN-O-glucuronidation, but were mixed and competitive inhibitors toward UGT1A1-mediated NCHN-O-glucuronidation, respectively. Furthermore, docking simulations showed that the binding areas of NHPN, kaempferol and acacetin on UGT1A1 were highly overlapping, and convergence with the binding area of bilirubin within UGT1A1. In summary, detailed structure-inhibition relationships of flavonoids as UGT1A1 inhibitors were investigated carefully and the findings shed new light on the interactions between flavonoids and UGT1A1, and will contribute considerably to the development of flavonoid-type drugs without strong UGT1A1 inhibition.Peer reviewe
CodeFuse-13B: A Pretrained Multi-lingual Code Large Language Model
Code Large Language Models (Code LLMs) have gained significant attention in
the industry due to their wide applications in the full lifecycle of software
engineering. However, the effectiveness of existing models in understanding
non-English inputs for multi-lingual code-related tasks is still far from well
studied. This paper introduces CodeFuse-13B, an open-sourced pre-trained code
LLM. It is specifically designed for code-related tasks with both English and
Chinese prompts and supports over 40 programming languages. CodeFuse achieves
its effectiveness by utilizing a high quality pre-training dataset that is
carefully filtered by program analyzers and optimized during the training
process. Extensive experiments are conducted using real-world usage scenarios,
the industry-standard benchmark HumanEval-x, and the specially designed
CodeFuseEval for Chinese prompts. To assess the effectiveness of CodeFuse, we
actively collected valuable human feedback from the AntGroup's software
development process where CodeFuse has been successfully deployed. The results
demonstrate that CodeFuse-13B achieves a HumanEval pass@1 score of 37.10%,
positioning it as one of the top multi-lingual code LLMs with similar parameter
sizes. In practical scenarios, such as code generation, code translation, code
comments, and testcase generation, CodeFuse performs better than other models
when confronted with Chinese prompts.Comment: 10 pages with 2 pages for reference
- …