1,744 research outputs found
The merger of vertically offset quasi-geostrophic vortices
We examine the critical merging distance between two equal-volume, equal-potential-vorticity quasi-geostrophic vortices. We focus on how this distance depends on the vertical offset between the two vortices, each having a unit mean height-to-width aspect ratio. The vertical direction is special in the quasi-geostrophic model (used to capture the leading-order dynamical features of stably stratified and rapidly rotating geophysical flows) since vertical advection is absent. Nevertheless vortex merger may still occur by horizontal advection. In this paper, we first investigate the equilibrium states for the two vortices as a function of their vertical and horizontal separation. We examine their basic properties together with their linear stability. These findings are next compared to numerical simulations of the nonlinear evolution of two spheres of potential vorticity. Three different regimes of interaction are identified, depending on the vertical offset. For a small offset, the interaction differs little from the case when the two vortices are horizontally aligned. On the other hand, when the vertical offset is comparable to the mean vortex radius, strong interaction occurs for greater horizontal gaps than in the horizontally aligned case, and therefore at significantly greater full separation distances. This perhaps surprising result is consistent with the linear stability analysis and appears to be a consequence of the anisotropy of the quasi-geostrophic equations. Finally, for large vertical offsets, vortex merger results in the formation of a metastable tilted dumbbell vortex.Publisher PDFPeer reviewe
Quantum transitions induced by the third cumulant of current fluctuations
We investigate the transitions induced by external current fluctuations on a
small probe quantum system. The rates for the transitions between the energy
states are calculated using the real-time Keldysh formalism for the density
matrix evolution. We especially detail the effects of the third cumulant of
current fluctuations inductively coupled to a quantum bit and propose a setup
for detecting the frequency-dependent third cumulant through the transitions it
induces.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
QND measurement of a superconducting qubit in the weakly projective regime
Quantum state detectors based on switching of hysteretic Josephson junctions
biased close to their critical current are simple to use but have strong
back-action. We show that the back-action of a DC-switching detector can be
considerably reduced by limiting the switching voltage and using a fast
cryogenic amplifier, such that a single readout can be completed within 25 ns
at a repetition rate of 1 MHz without loss of contrast. Based on a sequence of
two successive readouts we show that the measurement has a clear quantum
non-demolition character, with a QND fidelity of 75 %.Comment: submitted to PR
Joint Causal Inference from Multiple Contexts
The gold standard for discovering causal relations is by means of
experimentation. Over the last decades, alternative methods have been proposed
that can infer causal relations between variables from certain statistical
patterns in purely observational data. We introduce Joint Causal Inference
(JCI), a novel approach to causal discovery from multiple data sets from
different contexts that elegantly unifies both approaches. JCI is a causal
modeling framework rather than a specific algorithm, and it can be implemented
using any causal discovery algorithm that can take into account certain
background knowledge. JCI can deal with different types of interventions (e.g.,
perfect, imperfect, stochastic, etc.) in a unified fashion, and does not
require knowledge of intervention targets or types in case of interventional
data. We explain how several well-known causal discovery algorithms can be seen
as addressing special cases of the JCI framework, and we also propose novel
implementations that extend existing causal discovery methods for purely
observational data to the JCI setting. We evaluate different JCI
implementations on synthetic data and on flow cytometry protein expression data
and conclude that JCI implementations can considerably outperform
state-of-the-art causal discovery algorithms.Comment: Final version, as published by JML
Superconductor-insulator transition in nanowires and nanowire arrays
Superconducting nanowires are the dual elements to Josephson junctions, with
quantum phase-slip processes replacing the tunneling of Cooper pairs. When the
quantum phase-slip amplitude ES is much smaller than the inductive energy EL,
the nanowire responds as a superconducting inductor. When the inductive energy
is small, the response is capacitive. The crossover at low temperatures as a
function of ES/EL is discussed and compared with earlier experimental results.
For one-dimensional and two-dimensional arrays of nanowires quantum phase
transitions are expected as a function of ES/EL. They can be tuned by a
homogeneous magnetic frustration.Comment: 15 pages, 10 figure
Quantum state transfer in arrays of flux qubits
In this work, we describe a possible experimental realization of Bose's idea
to use spin chains for short distance quantum communication [S. Bose, {\it
Phys. Rev. Lett.} {\bf 91} 207901]. Josephson arrays have been proposed and
analyzed as transmission channels for systems of superconducting charge qubits.
Here, we consider a chain of persistent current qubits, that is appropriate for
state transfer with high fidelity in systems containing flux qubits. We
calculate the fidelity of state transfer for this system. In general, the
Hamiltonian of this system is not of XXZ-type, and we analyze the magnitude and
the effect of the terms that don't conserve the z-component of the total spin.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figure
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