1,201 research outputs found
Fast and robust quantum computation with ionic Wigner crystals
We present a detailed analysis of the modulated-carrier quantum phase gate
implemented with Wigner crystals of ions confined in Penning traps. We
elaborate on a recent scheme, proposed by two of the authors, to engineer
two-body interactions between ions in such crystals. We analyze for the first
time the situation in which the cyclotron (w_c) and the crystal rotation (w_r)
frequencies do not fulfill the condition w_c=2w_r. It is shown that even in the
presence of the magnetic field in the rotating frame the many-body (classical)
Hamiltonian describing small oscillations from the ion equilibrium positions
can be recast in canonical form. As a consequence, we are able to demonstrate
that fast and robust two-qubit gates are achievable within the current
experimental limitations. Moreover, we describe a realization of the
state-dependent sign-changing dipole forces needed to realize the investigated
quantum computing scheme.Comment: 14 pages, 11 figures, published versio
Ion induced density bubble in a strongly correlated one dimensional gas
We consider a harmonically trapped Tonks-Girardeau gas of impenetrable bosons
in the presence of a single embedded ion, which is assumed to be tightly
confined in a RF trap. In an ultracold ion-atom collision the ion's charge
induces an electric dipole moment in the atoms which leads to an attractive
potential asymptotically. We treat the ion as a static deformation of
the harmonic trap potential and model its short range interaction with the gas
in the framework of quantum defect theory. The molecular bound states of the
ionic potential are not populated due to the lack of any possible relaxation
process in the Tonks-Girardeau regime. Armed with this knowledge we calculate
the density profile of the gas in the presence of a central ionic impurity and
show that a density \textit{bubble} of the order of a micron occurs around the
ion for typical experimental parameters. From these exact results we show that
an ionic impurity in a Tonks gas can be described using a pseudopotential,
allowing for significantly easier treatment.Comment: Accepted for publication in Physical Review A (Rapid Communications)
Wigner crystals of ions as quantum hard drives
Atomic systems in regular lattices are intriguing systems for implementing
ideas in quantum simulation and information processing. Focusing on laser
cooled ions forming Wigner crystals in Penning traps, we find a robust and
simple approach to engineering non-trivial 2-body interactions sufficient for
universal quantum computation. We then consider extensions of our approach to
the fast generation of large cluster states, and a non-local architecture using
an asymmetric entanglement generation procedure between a Penning trap system
and well-established linear Paul trap designs.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Staying adiabatic with unknown energy gap
We introduce an algorithm to perform an optimal adiabatic evolution that
operates without an apriori knowledge of the system spectrum. By probing the
system gap locally, the algorithm maximizes the evolution speed, thus
minimizing the total evolution time. We test the algorithm on the Landau-Zener
transition and then apply it on the quantum adiabatic computation of 3-SAT: The
result is compatible with an exponential speed-up for up to twenty qubits with
respect to classical algorithms. We finally study a possible algorithm
improvement by combining it with the quantum Zeno effect.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
A simple quantum gate with atom chips
We present a simple scheme for implementing an atomic phase gate using two
degrees of freedom for each atom and discuss its realization with cold rubidium
atoms on atom chips. We investigate the performance of this collisional phase
gate and show that gate operations with high fidelity can be realized in
magnetic traps that are currently available on atom chips.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figures. One missing reference added in v2. To appear in
European Physical Journal
GaN and InN nanowires grown by MBE: a comparison
Morphological, optical and transport properties of GaN and InN nanowires
grown by molecular beam epitaxy (MBE) have been studied. The differences
between the two materials in respect to growth parameters and optimization
procedure was stressed. The nanowires crystalline quality has been investigated
by means of their optical properties. A comparison of the transport
characteristics was given. For each material a band schema was shown, which
takes into account transport and optical features and is based on Fermi level
pinning at the surface.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Controlled collisions of a single atom and ion guided by movable trapping potentials
We consider a system composed of a trapped atom and a trapped ion. The ion
charge induces in the atom an electric dipole moment, which attracts it with an
r^{-4} dependence at large distances. In the regime considered here, the
characteristic range of the atom-ion interaction is comparable or larger than
the characteristic size of the trapping potential, which excludes the
application of the contact pseudopotential. The short-range part of the
interaction is described in the framework of quantum-defect theory, by
introducing some short-range parameters, which can be related to the s-wave
scattering length. When the separation between traps is changed we observe
trap-induced shape resonances between molecular bound states and vibrational
states of the external trapping potential. Our analysis is extended to
quasi-one-dimensional geometries, when the scattering exhibit
confinement-induced resonances, similar to the ones studied before for
short-range interactions. For quasi-one-dimensional systems we investigate the
effects of coupling between the center of mass and relative motion, which
occurs for different trapping frequencies of atom and ion traps. Finally, we
show how the two types of resonances can be employed for quantum state control
and spectroscopy of atom-ion molecules.Comment: 17 pages, 16 figure
Efficient and robust initialization of a qubit register with fermionic atoms
We show that fermionic atoms have crucial advantages over bosonic atoms in
terms of loading in optical lattices for use as a possible quantum computation
device. After analyzing the change in the level structure of a non-uniform
confining potential as a periodic potential is superimposed to it, we show how
this structure combined with the Pauli principle and fermion degeneracy can be
exploited to create unit occupancy of the lattice sites with very high
efficiency.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Are violations to temporal Bell inequalities there when somebody looks?
The possibility of observing violations of temporal Bell inequalities,
originally proposed by Leggett as a mean of testing the quantum mechanical
delocalization of suitably chosen macroscopic bodies, is discussed by taking
into account the effect of the measurement process. A general criterion
quantifying this possibility is defined and shown not to be fulfilled by the
various experimental configurations proposed so far to test inequalities of
different forms.Comment: 7 pages, 1 eps figure, needs europhys.sty and euromacr.tex, enclosed
in the .tar.gz file; accepted for publication in Europhysics Letter
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