Two-dimensional crystals of trapped ions are a promising system with which to
implement quantum simulations of challenging problems such as spin frustration.
Here, we present a design for a surface-electrode elliptical ion trap which
produces a 2-D ion crystal and is amenable to microfabrication, which would
enable higher simulated coupling rates, as well as interactions based on
magnetic forces generated by on-chip currents. Working in an 11 K cryogenic
environment, we experimentally verify to within 5% a numerical model of the
structure of ion crystals in the trap. We also explore the possibility of
implementing quantum simulation using magnetic forces, and calculate J-coupling
rates on the order of 10^3 / s for an ion crystal height of 10 microns, using a
current of 1 A.
Title:
Improved Loss-Tolerant Quantum Coin Flipping
Authors:
André Chailloux
In this paper, we present a loss-tolerant quantum strong coin flipping
protocol with bias 0.359. This is an improvement over Berlin etal's protocol
[BBBG08] which achieves a bias of 0.4. To achieve this, we extend Berlin et
al.'s protocol by adding an encryption step that hides some information to Bob
until he confirms that he successfully measured.
Long decay times were previously observed in samples such as 29Si, C60,Y2O3
by applying multipulse nuclear magnetic resonance sequences to measure
decoherence times. They are originated in stimulated echoes caused by the pulse
angle distributions predictable for inhomogeneously broadened lines. In the
present work, a detailed analysis describing how the stimulated echoes can be
exploited as quantum coherence memories is presented. We introduce a method
based on field gradients to storage coherences as polarization in a controlled
way in homogeneous samples. The possibility to keep a coherent state frozen
while another part of the sample is subjected to quantum operations opens new
perspectives in the field of quantum information. Upon recovery of the storaged
coherences, interactions among the whole system can be turned on. However, in
order to perform quantum computation, the knowledge of the true coherence time
is necessary. We applied the proposed method to demonstrate under the
stimulated echo formalism, the appropriate experimental scheme that enables a
quenching of the coherence storage, thus rendering a measurement of the
coherence decay time T2.
We report measurements of the optical properties of the 1042 nm transition of
negatively-charged Nitrogen-Vacancy (NV) centers in type 1b diamond. The
results indicate that the upper level of this transition couples to the
m_s=+/-1 sublevels of the {^3}E excited state and is short-lived, with a
lifetime <~ 1 ns. The lower level is shown to have a temperature-dependent
lifetime of 462(10) ns at 4.4 K and 219(3) ns at 295 K. The light-polarization
dependence of 1042 nm absorption confirms that the transition is between
orbitals of A_1 and E character. The results shed new light on the NV level
structure and optical pumping mechanism.
Title:
On the relationship between parametric two-electron
reduced-density-matrix methods and the coupled electron pair approximation
Authors:
A. Eugene DePrince,
David A. Mazziotti
Parametric two-electron reduced-density-matrix (p-2RDM) methods have enjoyed
much success in recent years; the methods have been shown to exhibit accuracies
greater than coupled cluster with single and double substitutions (CCSD) for
both closed- and open-shell ground-state energies, properties, geometric
parameters, and harmonic frequencies. The class of methods is herein discussed
within the context of the coupled electron pair approximation (CEPA), and
several CEPA-like topological factors are presented for use within the p-2RDM
framework. The resulting p-2RDM/n methods can be viewed as a density-based
generalization of CEPA/n family that are numerically very similar to
traditional CEPA methodologies. We cite the important distinction that the
obtained energies represent stationary points, facilitating the efficient
evaluation of properties and geometric derivatives. The p-2RDM/n formalism is
generalized for an equal treatment of exclusion-principle-violating (EPV)
diagrams that occur in the occupied and virtual spaces. One of these general
topological factors is shown to be identical to that proposed by Kollmar [C.
Kollmar, J. Chem. Phys. 125, 084108 (2006)], derived in an effort to
approximately enforce the D, Q, and G conditions for N-representability in his
size-extensive density matrix functional.
Title:
Ultralong Efficient Photon Storage Using Optical Locking
Authors:
Byoung S. Ham
For the last decade quantum memories have been intensively studied for
potential applications to quantum information and communications using atomic
and ionic ensembles. With the importance of a multimode storage capability in
quantum memories, on-demand control of reversible inhomogeneous broadening of
an optical medium has been broadly investigated recently. However, the photon
storage time in these researches is still too short to apply for long-distance
quantum communications. In this paper, we demonstrate new physics of spin
population decay dependent ultralong photon storage method, where spin
population decay time is several orders of magnitude longer than the
conventional constraint of spin phase decay time.
Title:
Temperature driven structural phase transition for trapped ions and its
experimental detection
Authors:
Zhe-Xuan Gong,
G. -D. Lin,
L. -M. Duan
A Wigner crystal formed with trapped ion can undergo structural phase
transition, which is determined only by the mechanical conditions on a
classical level. Instead of this classical result, we show that through
consideration of quantum and thermal fluctuation, a structural phase transition
can be solely driven by change of the system's temperature. We determine a
finite-temperature phase diagram for trapped ions using the renormalization
group method and the path integral formalism, and propose an experimental
scheme to observe the predicted temperature-driven structural phase transition,
which is well within the reach of the current ion trap technology.
Results of the numerical Monte-Carlo simulations for the Stark-tuned
F\"orster resonance and dipole blockade between 2 to 5 cold rubidium Rydberg
atoms in various spatial configurations are presented. Effect of the atom
spatial uncertainties on the resonance amplitude and spectrum is investigated.
Feasibility to observe coherent Rabi-like population oscillations at a
F\"orster resonance between two cold Rydberg atoms is analyzed. Spectra and
fidelity of the Rydberg dipole blockade are calculated for various experimental
conditions, including nonzero detuning from the F\"orster resonance and finite
laser line width. The results are discussed in the context of quantum
information processing with Rydberg atoms.
Title:
The RCCN criterion of separability for states in infinite-dimensional
quantum systems
Authors:
Yu Guo,
Jinchuan Hou
In this paper, the realignment criterion and the RCCN criterion of
separability for states in infinite-dimensional bipartite quantum systems are
established. Let $H_A$ and $H_B$ be complex Hilbert spaces with $\dim
H_A\otimes H_B=+\infty$. Let $\rho$ be a state on $H_A\otimes H_B$ and
$\{\delta_k\}$ be the Schmidt coefficients of $\rho$ as a vector in the Hilbert
space ${\mathcal C}_2(H_A)\otimes{\mathcal C}_2(H_B)$. We introduce the
realignment operation $\rho^R$ and the computable cross norm $\|\rho\|_{\rm
CCN}$ of $\rho$ and show that, if $\rho$ is separable, then $\|\rho^{R}\|_{\rm
Tr}=\|\rho\|_{\rm CCN}=\sum\limits_k\delta_k\leq1.$ In particular, if $\rho$ is
a pure state, then $\rho$ is separable if and only if $\|\rho^{R}\|_{\rm
Tr}=\|\rho\|_{\rm CCN}=\sum\limits_k\delta_k=1$.
The paper review and develop the alternative formulation of quantum mechanics
known as the phase space quantum mechanics or deformation quantization. It is
shown that the quantization naturally arises as an appropriate deformation of
the classical Hamiltonian mechanics. More precisely, the deformation of the
point-wise product of observables to an appropriate noncommutative
$\star$-product and the deformation of the Poisson bracket to an appropriate
Lie bracket is the key element in introducing the quantization of classical
Hamiltonian systems.
The formalism of the phase space quantum mechanics is presented in a very
systematic way for the case of Hamiltonian systems without any constrains and
for a very wide class of deformations. The considered class of deformations and
the corresponding $\star$-products contains all deformations which can be found
in the literature devoted to the subject of the phase space quantum mechanics.
Fundamental properties of $\star$-products of observables, associated with
the considered deformations are presented as well. Moreover, a space of states
containing all admissible states is introduced, where the admissible states are
appropriate pseudo-probability distributions defined on the phase space. It is
proved that the space of states is endowed with a structure of a Hilbert
algebra with respect to the $\star$-multiplication.
The most important result of the paper shows that developed formalism is more
fundamental then the axiomatic ordinary quantum mechanics which appears in the
presented approach as the intrinsic element of the general formalism. In
addition, examples of a free particle and a simple harmonic oscillator
illustrating the formalism of the deformation quantization and its classical
limit are given.
Title:
Field-induced decay of quantum vacuum: visualizing pair production in a
classical photonic system
Authors:
Stefano Longhi
The phenomenon of vacuum decay, i.e. electron-positron pair production due to
the instability of the quantum electrodynamics vacuum in an external field, is
a remarkable prediction of Dirac theory whose experimental observation is still
lacking. Here a classic wave optics analogue of vacuum decay, based on light
propagation in curved waveguide superlattices, is proposed. Our photonic
analogue enables a simple and experimentally-accessible visualization in space
of the process of pair production as break up of an initially negative-energy
Gaussian wave packet, representing an electron in the Dirac sea, under the
influence of an oscillating electric field.
Title:
Non-equilibrium dynamics of bosonic atoms in optical lattices:
Decoherence of many-body states due to spontaneous emission
Authors:
H. Pichler,
A. J. Daley,
P. Zoller
We analyze in detail the heating of bosonic atoms in an optical lattice due
to incoherent scattering of light from the lasers forming the lattice. Because
atoms scattered into higher bands do not thermalize on the timescale of typical
experiments, this process cannot be described by the total energy increase in
the system alone (which is determined by single-particle effects). The heating
instead involves an important interplay between the atomic physics of the
heating process and the many-body physics of the state. We characterize the
effects on many-body states for various system parameters, where we observe
important differences in the heating for strongly and weakly interacting
regimes, as well as a strong dependence on the sign of the laser detuning from
the excited atomic state. We compute heating rates and changes to
characteristic correlation functions based both on perturbation theory
calculations, and a time-dependent calculation of the dissipative many-body
dynamics. The latter is made possible for 1D systems by combining
time-dependent density matrix renormalization group (t-DMRG) methods with
quantum trajectory techniques.
Title:
Interference Phenomena in Quantum Information
Authors:
Martin Stefanak
One of the key features of quantum mechanics is the interference of
probability amplitudes. The reason for the appearance of interference is
mathematically very simple. It is the linear structure of the Hilbert space
which is used for the description of quantum systems. In terms of physics we
usually talk about the superposition principle valid for individual and
composed quantum objects. So, while the source of interference is
understandable it leads in fact to many counter-intuitive physical phenomena
which puzzle physicists for almost hundred years.
The present thesis studies interference in two seemingly disjoint fields of
physics. However, both have strong links to quantum information processing and
hence are related. In the first part we study the intriguing properties of
quantum walks. In the second part we analyze a sophisticated application of
wave packet dynamics in atoms and molecules for factorization of integers.
The main body of the thesis is based on the original contributions listed
separately at the end of the thesis. The more technical aspects and brief
summaries of used methods are left for appendices.
We apply the notion of asymptotic iteration method (AIM) to determine
eigenvalues of the bosonic Hamiltonians that include a wide class of quantum
optical models. We consider solutions of the Hamiltonians, which are even
polynomials of the fourth order with the respect to Boson operators. We also
demonstrate applicability of the method for obtaining eigenvalues of the simple
Lie algebraic structures. Eigenvalues of the multi-boson Hamiltonians have been
obtained by transforming in the form of the single boson Hamiltonian in the
framework of AIM.
Title:
Remarks on the Solution of the Position Dependent Mass (PDM)
Schr\"odinger Equation
Authors:
Ramazan Koc,
Seda Sayin
An approximate method is proposed to solve position dependent mass
Schr\"odinger equation. The procedure suggested here leads to the solution of
the PDM Schr\"odinger equation without transforming the potential function to
the mass space or vice verse. The method based on asymptotic Taylor expansion
of the function, produces an approximate analytical expression for
eigenfunction and numerical results for eigenvalues of the PDM Schr\"odinger
equation. The results show that PDM and constant mass Schr\"odinger equations
are not isospectral. The calculations are carried out with the aid of a
computer system of symbolic or numerical calculation by constructing a simple
algorithm.
1002.3824wilson : In this paper Sedrakyan and Chubukov have finally resolved the long-standing issue about the origin of the pseudogap in cuprates. This study...
1005.5173renner : To clarify in response to the above comment, our main result is that quantum theory cannot be *extended*. We consider an extension to a the...
1005.5173peaches : I'm not sure that it's fair to say that this is is an extension of Bell's result in the general case because the main theorem relies on the ...
1005.4932ayvlasov : I am not quite realizing, if it is necessary to make some comments, because most arguments already have been raised by few different people ...