78 research outputs found
Synchrotron Radiation in the Standard Model Extension
We obtain a system of exact solutions of the Dirac equation for an electron
moving in a constant homogeneous external magnetic field with account of its
vacuum magnetic moment and assumed Lorentz invariance violation in the minimal
CPT-odd form in the framework of the Standard Model Extension. Using these
solutions, characteristics of the particle synchrotron radiation are
calculated, and possible observable effects caused by the Lorentz non-invariant
interaction are described. We demonstrate that the angular distribution of the
radiation has specific asymmetry, which can be explained as a consequence of
non-conservation of transversal electron polarization in the presence of a
background Lorentz non-invariant condensate field.Comment: 14 pages, 2 figure
An addressable quantum dot qubit with fault-tolerant control fidelity
Exciting progress towards spin-based quantum computing has recently been made
with qubits realized using nitrogen-vacancy (N-V) centers in diamond and
phosphorus atoms in silicon, including the demonstration of long coherence
times made possible by the presence of spin-free isotopes of carbon and
silicon. However, despite promising single-atom nanotechnologies, there remain
substantial challenges in coupling such qubits and addressing them
individually. Conversely, lithographically defined quantum dots have an
exchange coupling that can be precisely engineered, but strong coupling to
noise has severely limited their dephasing times and control fidelities. Here
we combine the best aspects of both spin qubit schemes and demonstrate a
gate-addressable quantum dot qubit in isotopically engineered silicon with a
control fidelity of 99.6%, obtained via Clifford based randomized benchmarking
and consistent with that required for fault-tolerant quantum computing. This
qubit has orders of magnitude improved coherence times compared with other
quantum dot qubits, with T_2* = 120 mus and T_2 = 28 ms. By gate-voltage tuning
of the electron g*-factor, we can Stark shift the electron spin resonance (ESR)
frequency by more than 3000 times the 2.4 kHz ESR linewidth, providing a direct
path to large-scale arrays of addressable high-fidelity qubits that are
compatible with existing manufacturing technologies
Unified software repositories for Wendelstein 7-X: Workflow elements for fusion software development
Quantum Gates and Memory using Microwave Dressed States
Trapped atomic ions have been successfully used for demonstrating basic
elements of universal quantum information processing (QIP). Nevertheless,
scaling up of these methods and techniques to achieve large scale universal
QIP, or more specialized quantum simulations remains challenging. The use of
easily controllable and stable microwave sources instead of complex laser
systems on the other hand promises to remove obstacles to scalability.
Important remaining drawbacks in this approach are the use of magnetic field
sensitive states, which shorten coherence times considerably, and the
requirement to create large stable magnetic field gradients. Here, we present
theoretically a novel approach based on dressing magnetic field sensitive
states with microwave fields which addresses both issues and permits fast
quantum logic. We experimentally demonstrate basic building blocks of this
scheme to show that these dressed states are long-lived and coherence times are
increased by more than two orders of magnitude compared to bare magnetic field
sensitive states. This changes decisively the prospect of microwave-driven ion
trap QIP and offers a new route to extend coherence times for all systems that
suffer from magnetic noise such as neutral atoms, NV-centres, quantum dots, or
circuit-QED systems.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figure
Dynamical decoupling and noise spectroscopy with a superconducting flux qubit
The characterization and mitigation of decoherence in natural and artificial
two-level systems (qubits) is fundamental to quantum information science and
its applications. Decoherence of a quantum superposition state arises from the
interaction between the constituent system and the uncontrolled degrees of
freedom in its environment. Within the standard Bloch-Redfield picture of
two-level system dynamics, qubit decoherence is characterized by two rates: a
longitudinal relaxation rate Gamma1 due to the exchange of energy with the
environment, and a transverse relaxation rate Gamma2 = Gamma1/2 + Gamma_phi
which contains the pure dephasing rate Gamma_phi. Irreversible energy
relaxation can only be mitigated by reducing the amount of environmental noise,
reducing the qubit's internal sensitivity to that noise, or through multi-qubit
encoding and error correction protocols (which already presume ultra-low error
rates). In contrast, dephasing is in principle reversible and can be refocused
dynamically through the application of coherent control pulse methods. In this
work we demonstrate how dynamical-decoupling techniques can moderate the
dephasing effects of low-frequency noise on a superconducting qubit with
energy-relaxation time T1 = 1/Gamma1 = 12 us. Using the CPMG sequence with up
to 200 pi-pulses, we demonstrate a 50-fold improvement in the transverse
relaxation time T2 over its baseline value. We observe relaxation-limited times
T2(CPMG) = 23 us = 2 T1 resulting from CPMG-mediated Gaussian pure-dephasing
times in apparent excess of 100 us. We leverage the filtering property of this
sequence in conjunction with Rabi and energy relaxation measurements to
facilitate the spectroscopy and reconstruction of the environmental noise power
spectral density.Comment: 21 pages (incl. 11-page appendix); 4 (+7) figure
Individual Variations in Maternal Care Early in Life Correlate with Later Life Decision-Making and c-Fos Expression in Prefrontal Subregions of Rats
Early life adversity affects hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal axis activity, alters cognitive functioning and in humans is thought to increase the vulnerability to psychopathology–e.g. depression, anxiety and schizophrenia- later in life. Here we investigated whether subtle natural variations among individual rat pups in the amount of maternal care received, i.e. differences in the amount of licking and grooming (LG), correlate with anxiety and prefrontal cortex-dependent behavior in young adulthood. Therefore, we examined the correlation between LG received during the first postnatal week and later behavior in the elevated plus maze and in decision-making processes using a rodent version of the Iowa Gambling Task (rIGT). In our cohort of male and female animals a high degree of LG correlated with less anxiety in the elevated plus maze and more advantageous choices during the last 10 trials of the rIGT. In tissue collected 2 hrs after completion of the task, the correlation between LG and c-fos expression (a marker of neuronal activity) was established in structures important for IGT performance. Negative correlations existed between rIGT performance and c-fos expression in the lateral orbitofrontal cortex, prelimbic cortex, infralimbic cortex and insular cortex. The insular cortex correlations between c-fos expression and decision-making performance depended on LG background; this was also true for the lateral orbitofrontal cortex in female rats. Dendritic complexity of insular or infralimbic pyramidal neurons did not or weakly correlate with LG background. We conclude that natural variations in maternal care received by pups may significantly contribute to later-life decision-making and activity of underlying brain structures
Light regulation of metabolic pathways in fungi
Light represents a major carrier of information in nature. The molecular machineries translating its electromagnetic energy (photons) into the chemical language of cells transmit vital signals for adjustment of virtually every living organism to its habitat. Fungi react to illumination in various ways, and we found that they initiate considerable adaptations in their metabolic pathways upon growth in light or after perception of a light pulse. Alterations in response to light have predominantly been observed in carotenoid metabolism, polysaccharide and carbohydrate metabolism, fatty acid metabolism, nucleotide and nucleoside metabolism, and in regulation of production of secondary metabolites. Transcription of genes is initiated within minutes, abundance and activity of metabolic enzymes are adjusted, and subsequently, levels of metabolites are altered to cope with the harmful effects of light or to prepare for reproduction, which is dependent on light in many cases. This review aims to give an overview on metabolic pathways impacted by light and to illustrate the physiological significance of light for fungi. We provide a basis for assessment whether a given metabolic pathway might be subject to regulation by light and how these properties can be exploited for improvement of biotechnological processes
How ice grows from premelting films and water droplets
Close to the triple point, the surface of ice is covered by a thin liquid
layer (so-called quasi-liquid layer) which crucially impacts growth and melting
rates. Experimental probes cannot observe the growth processes below this
layer, and classical models of growth by vapor deposition do not account for
the formation of premelting films. Here, we develop a mesoscopic model of
liquid-film mediated ice growth, and identify the various resulting growth
regimes. At low saturation, freezing proceeds by terrace spreading, but the
motion of the buried solid is conveyed through the liquid to the outer
liquid-vapor interface. At higher saturations water droplets condense, a large
crater forms below, and freezing proceeds undetectably beneath the droplet. Our
approach is a general framework that naturally models freezing close to three
phase coexistence and provides a first principle theory of ice growth and
melting which may prove useful in the geosciences.Comment: 32 pages, 10 figure
Quantum Spacetime Phenomenology
I review the current status of phenomenological programs inspired by
quantum-spacetime research. I stress in particular the significance of results
establishing that certain data analyses provide sensitivity to effects
introduced genuinely at the Planck scale. And my main focus is on
phenomenological programs that managed to affect the directions taken by
studies of quantum-spacetime theories.Comment: 125 pages, LaTex. This V2 is updated and more detailed than the V1,
particularly for quantum-spacetime phenomenology. The main text of this V2 is
about 25% more than the main text of the V1. Reference list roughly double
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