22,440 research outputs found
Group theoretic, Lie algebraic and Jordan algebraic formulations of the SIC existence problem
Although symmetric informationally complete positive operator valued measures
(SIC POVMs, or SICs for short) have been constructed in every dimension up to
67, a general existence proof remains elusive. The purpose of this paper is to
show that the SIC existence problem is equivalent to three other, on the face
of it quite different problems. Although it is still not clear whether these
reformulations of the problem will make it more tractable, we believe that the
fact that SICs have these connections to other areas of mathematics is of some
intrinsic interest. Specifically, we reformulate the SIC problem in terms of
(1) Lie groups, (2) Lie algebras and (3) Jordan algebras (the second result
being a greatly strengthened version of one previously obtained by Appleby,
Flammia and Fuchs). The connection between these three reformulations is
non-trivial: It is not easy to demonstrate their equivalence directly, without
appealing to their common equivalence to SIC existence. In the course of our
analysis we obtain a number of other results which may be of some independent
interest.Comment: 36 pages, to appear in Quantum Inf. Compu
Criteria for Continuous-Variable Quantum Teleportation
We derive an experimentally testable criterion for the teleportation of
quantum states of continuous variables. This criterion is especially relevant
to the recent experiment of Furusawa et al. [Science 282, 706-709 (1998)] where
an input-output fidelity of was achieved for optical coherent
states. Our derivation demonstrates that fidelities greater than 1/2 could not
have been achieved through the use of a classical channel alone; quantum
entanglement was a crucial ingredient in the experiment.Comment: 12 pages, to appear in Journal of Modern Optic
Dilepton production at HADES: theoretical predictions
Dileptons represent a unique probe for nuclear matter under extreme
conditions reached in heavy-ion collisions. They allow to study meson
properties, like mass and decay width, at various density and temperature
regimes. Present days models allow generally a good description of dilepton
spectra in ultra-relativistic heavy ion collision. For the energy regime of a
few GeV/nucleon, important discrepancies between theory and experiment, known
as the DLS puzzle, have been observed. Various models, including the one
developed by the T\"{u}bingen group, have tried to address this problem, but
have proven only partially successful. High precision spectra of dilepton
emission in heavy-ion reactions at 1 and 2 GeV/nucleon will be released in the
near future by the HADES Collaboration at GSI. Here we present the predictions
for dilepton spectra in C+C reactions at 1 and 2 GeV/nucleon and investigate up
to what degree possible scenarios for the in-medium modification of vector
mesons properties are accessible by the HADES experiment.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures; submitted to Phys.Lett.
Spin Coherence During Optical Excitation of a Single NV Center in Diamond
We examine the quantum spin state of a single nitrogen-vacancy (NV) center in
diamond at room temperature as it makes a transition from the orbital
ground-state (GS) to the orbital excited-state (ES) during non-resonant optical
excitation. While the fluorescence read-out of NV-center spins relies on
conservation of the longitudinal spin projection during optical excitation, the
question of quantum phase preservation has not been examined. Using Ramsey
measurements and quantum process tomography, we establish limits on NV center
spin decoherence induced during optical excitation. Treating the optical
excitation and ES spin precession as a quantum process, we measure a process
fidelity of F=0.87\pm0.03, which includes ES spin dephasing during measurement.
Extrapolation to the moment of optical excitation yields F\approx0.95. This
result demonstrates that ES spin interactions may be used as a resource for
quantum control because the quantum spin state can survive incoherent orbital
transitions.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figure
Vector magnetic field microscopy using nitrogen vacancy centers in diamond
The localized spin triplet ground state of a nitrogen vacancy (NV) center in
diamond can be used in atomic-scale detection of local magnetic fields. Here we
present a technique using these defects in diamond to image fields around
magnetic structures. We extract the local magnetic field vector by probing
resonant transitions of the four fixed tetrahedral NV orientations. In
combination with confocal microscopy techniques, we construct a 2-dimensional
image of the local magnetic field vectors. Measurements are done in external
fields less than 50 G and under ambient conditions.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figure
Spin Control of Drifting Electrons using Local Nuclear Polarization in Ferromagnet/Semiconductor Heterostructures
We demonstrate methods to locally control the spin rotation of moving
electrons in a GaAs channel. The Larmor frequency of optically-injected spins
is modulated when the spins are dragged through a region of spin-polarized
nuclei created at a MnAs/GaAs interface. The effective field created by the
nuclei is controlled either optically or electrically using the ferromagnetic
proximity polarization effect. Spin rotation is also tuned by controlling the
carrier traverse time through the polarized region. We demonstrate coherent
spin rotations exceeding 4 pi radians during transport.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figure
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