9,797 research outputs found
Quantum phase transitions in superconductor--quantum-dot--superconductor Josephson structures with attractive intradot interaction
We theoretically study the superconducting proximity effect in a quantum dot
coupled to two superconducting leads when the intradot interaction between
electrons is made attractive. Because of the superconducting proximity effect,
the electronic states for the embedded quantum dot are either spin-polarized
states with an odd occupation number or BCS-like states with an even occupation
number. We show that in the presence of an external magnetic field, the system
can exhibit quantum phase transitions of fermion parity associated with the
occupation number. In this work, we adopt a self-consistent theoretical method
to extend our considerations beyond the so-called superconducting atomic limit
in which the superconducting gap for the leads is assumed to be the largest
energy scale. The method enables us to numerically investigate the electronic
structure of the dot as results of the attractive interaction. For energy phase
diagrams in the regime away from the atomic limit, we find a reentrant behavior
where a BCS-like phase of the dot exists in an intermediate range of the
hybridization strength between the quantum dot and the leads. We also consider
Josephson current phase relations and identify a number of examples showing
phase transitions that may offer important switching effects
Two-dimensional group delay in graphene probed by spin precession measurements
We take graphene as an example to demonstrate that the present widely adopted
expression is only the scattering component of a true 2D group delay in the
condensed matter context, in which the spatial Goos-H\"{a}nchen (GH) shift
along an interface contributes an intrinsic component. We relate the dwell time
to spin precession and derive a relation between the 2D group delay and dwell
time, whereby we for the first time reveal that, the group delay for 2D
ballistic electronic systems can be directly observed by measuring a
conductance difference in a weak-field spin precession experiment. This
physical observable not only implies the group delay being a relevant quantity
even in the condensed matter context, but also provides an experimental
evidence for the intrinsic effect of the GH shift. Finally, we revisit the 2D
Hartman effect, a central issue of the group delay, by analytically solving it
via the vested relation and calculating the proposed observable at the Dirac
point.Comment: 12 preprint pages and 6 figure
Negative differential resistances with back gate-controlled lowest operation windows in graphene double barrier resonant tunneling diodes
We theoretically investigate negative differential resistance (NDR) of
massless and massive Dirac Fermions in double barrier resonant tunneling diodes
based on sufficiently short and wide graphene strips. The current-voltage
characteristics calculated in a rotated pseudospin space show that, the NDR
feature only presents with appropriate structural parameters for the massless
case and the peak-to-valley current ratio can be enhanced exponentially by a
tunable band gap. Remarkably, the lowest NDR operation window is nearly
structure-free and can be almost solely controlled by a back gate, which may
have potential applications in NDR devices with the operation window as a
crucial parameter.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Nonparametric and adaptive modeling of dynamic seasonality and trend with heteroscedastic and dependent errors
Seasonality (or periodicity) and trend are features describing an observed
sequence, and extracting these features is an important issue in many
scientific fields. However, it is not an easy task for existing methods to
analyze simultaneously the trend and {\it dynamics} of the seasonality such as
time-varying frequency and amplitude, and the {\it adaptivity} of the analysis
to such dynamics and robustness to heteroscedastic, dependent errors is not
guaranteed. These tasks become even more challenging when there exist multiple
seasonal components. We propose a nonparametric model to describe the dynamics
of multi-component seasonality, and investigate the recently developed
Synchrosqueezing transform (SST) in extracting these features in the presence
of a trend and heteroscedastic, dependent errors. The identifiability problem
of the nonparametric seasonality model is studied, and the adaptivity and
robustness properties of the SST are theoretically justified in both discrete-
and continuous-time settings. Consequently we have a new technique for
de-coupling the trend, seasonality and heteroscedastic, dependent error process
in a general nonparametric setup. Results of a series of simulations are
provided, and the incidence time series of varicella and herpes zoster in
Taiwan and respiratory signals observed from a sleep study are analyzed
Geometric Steering Criterion for Two-qubit States
According to the geometric characterization of measurement assemblages and
local hidden state (LHS) models, we propose a steering criterion which is both
necessary and sufficient for two-qubit states under arbitrary measurement sets.
A quantity is introduced to describe the required local resources to
reconstruct a measurement assemblage for two-qubit states. We show that the
quantity can be regarded as a quantification of steerability and be used to
find out optimal LHS models. Finally we propose a method to generate
unsteerable states, and construct some two-qubit states which are entangled but
unsteerable under all projective measurements
Characterizing Nonlocal Correlations via Universal Uncertainty Relations
Characterization and certification of nonlocal correlations is one of the the
central topics in quantum information theory. In this work, we develop the
detection methods of entanglement and steering based on the universal
uncertainty relations and fine-grained uncertainty relations. In the course of
our study, the uncertainty relations are formulated in majorization form, and
the uncertainty quantifier can be chosen as any convex Schur concave functions,
this leads to a large set of inequalities, including all existing criteria
based on entropies. We address the question that if all steerable states (or
entangled states) can be witnessed by some uncertainty-based inequality, we
find that for pure states and many important families of states, this is the
case
Monogamy Relation in No-disturbance Theories
The monogamy is a fundamental property of Bell nonlocality and contextuality.
In this article, we studied the -cycle noncontextual inequalities and
generalized CHSH inequalities in detail and found the sufficient conditions for
those inequalities to be hold. According to those conditions, we provide
several kind of tradeoff relations: monogamy of generalized Bell inequalities
in non-signaling framework, monogamy of cycle type noncontextual inequalities
and monogamy between Bell inequality and noncontextual inequality in general
no-disturbance framework. At last, some generic tradeoff relations of
generalized CHSH inequalities for -party physical systems, which are beyond
one-to-many scenario, are discussed
Geometric Local Hidden State Model for Some Two-qubit States
Adopting the geometric description of steering assemblages and local hidden
states (LHS) model, we construct the optimal LHS model for some two-qubit
states under continuous projective measurements, and obtain a sufficient
steering criterion for all two-qubit states. Using the criterion, we show more
two-qubit states that are asymmetric in steering scenario under projective
measurements. Then we generalize the geometric description into higher
dimensional bipartite cases, calculate the steering bound of two-qutrit
isotropic states and make discussion on more general cases
Hierarchy of Genuine Multipartite Quantum Correlations
Classifying states which exhibiting different statistical correlations is
among the most important problems in quantum information science and quantum
many-body physics. In bipartite case, there is a clear hierarchy of states with
different correlations: total correlation (T) discord (D)
entanglement (E) steering (S)
Bell~nonlocality (NL). However, very little is known about genuine multipartite
correlations (GM) for both conceptual and technical difficulties.
In this work, we show that, for any -partite qudit states, there also exist
such a hierarchy: genuine multipartite total correlations (GMT)
genuine multipartite discord (GMD) genuine multipartite
entanglement (GME) genuine multipartite steering (GMS)
genuine multipartite nonlocality (GMNL). Furthermore, by constructing precise
states, we show that GMT, GME and GMS are inequivalent with each other, thus
GMT GME GMS
Entropic No-Disturbance as a Physical Principle
The celebrated Bell-Kochen-Specker no-go theorem asserts that quantum
mechanics does not present the property of realism, the essence of the theorem
is the lack of a joint probability distributions for some experiment settings.
In this work, we exploit the information theoretic form of the theorem using
information measure instead of probabilistic measure and indicate that quantum
mechanics does not present such entropic realism neither. The entropic form of
Gleason's no-disturbance principle is developed and it turns out to be
characterized by the intersection of several entropic cones. Entropic
contextuality and entropic nonlocality are investigated in depth in this
framework. We show how one can construct monogamy relations using entropic cone
and basic Shannon-type inequalities. The general criterion for several entropic
tests to be monogamous is also developed, using the criterion, we demonstrate
that entropic nonlocal correlations are monogamous, entropic contextuality
tests are monogamous and entropic nonlocality and entropic contextuality are
also monogamous. Finally, we analyze the entropic monogamy relations for
multiparty and many-test case, which plays a crucial role in quantum network
communication
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