333 research outputs found
Apprenticeships and traineeships for 16 to 19 year-olds: Government response to the Committee's sixth report of session 2014-15 first special report of session 2015-16
House of Commons Education Committee : Appointment of Her Majesty’s Chief Inspector of Education, Children’s Services and Skills : Government Response to the Committee’s Second Report of Session: 2016–17 : First Special Report of Session 2016–17 : ordered by the House of Commons to be printed 14 September 2016
Exiting the EU: challenges and opportunities for higher education: Ninth Report of Session 2016–17
Extremism in schools: the Trojan Horse affair Ofsted response to the Committee's seventh report of session 2014-15 second special report of session 2015-16
House of Commons Education Committee: Social work reform: Government Response to the Committee’s Third Report of Session 2016–17: Second Special Report of Session 2016–17
Education 2.0? Designing the web for teaching and learning: A Commentary by the Technology Enhanced Learning phase of the Teaching and Learning Research Programme
Education, skills and productivity: commissioned research first joint special report of the Business, Innovation and Skills and Education Committees of session 2015-16 second special report of the Business, Innovation and Skills Committee of session 2015-16; third special report of the Education Committee of session 2015-16
Model for monitoring of a charge qubit using a radio-frequency quantum point contact including experimental imperfections
The extension of quantum trajectory theory to incorporate realistic
imperfections in the measurement of solid-state qubits is important for quantum
computation, particularly for the purposes of state preparation and
error-correction as well as for readout of computations. Previously this has
been achieved for low-frequency (dc) weak measurements. In this paper we extend
realistic quantum trajectory theory to include radio frequency (rf) weak
measurements where a low-transparency quantum point contact (QPC), coupled to a
charge qubit, is used to damp a classical oscillator circuit. The resulting
realistic quantum trajectory equation must be solved numerically. We present an
analytical result for the limit of large dissipation within the oscillator
(relative to the QPC), where the oscillator slaves to the qubit. The rf+dc mode
of operation is considered. Here the QPC is biased (dc) as well as subjected to
a small-amplitude sinusoidal carrier signal (rf). The rf+dc QPC is shown to be
a low-efficiency charge-qubit detector, that may nevertheless be higher than
the dc-QPC (which is subject to 1/f noise).Comment: 12 pages, 2 colour figures. v3 is published version (minor changes
since v2
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