91 research outputs found
Implementation of the refined Deutsch-Jozsa algorithn on a 3-bit NMR quantum computer
We implemented the refined Deutsch-Jozsa algorithm on a 3-bit nuclear
magnetic resonance quantum computer, which is the meaningful test of quantum
parallelism because qubits are entangled. All of the balanced and constant
functions were realized exactly. The results agree well with theoretical
predictions and clearly distinguish the balanced functions from constant
functions. Efficient refocusing schemes were proposed for the soft z-pulse and
J-coupling and it is proved that the thermal equilibrium state gives the same
results as the pure state for this algorithm.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, 1 tables, REVTe
NMR study on the stability of the magnetic ground state in MnCrO
The canting angles and fluctuation of the magnetic ion spins of spinel oxide
MnCrO were studied by nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) at low
temperatures, which has a collinear ferrimagnetic order below and a
ferrimagnetic spiral order below . Contrary to previous reports,
only one spin canting angle of Cr ions was observed. The spin canting angles of
Mn and Cr ions in the ferrimagnetic spiral obtained at a liquid-He temperature
were and , respectively. The nuclear spin-spin
relaxation was determined by the Suhl-Nakamura interaction at low temperatures
but the relaxation rate increases rapidly as the temperature
approaches . This indicates that the fluctuation of the spiral component
becomes faster as the temperature increases but not fast enough to leave an
averaged hyperfine field to nuclei in the time scale of nuclear spin precession
in the ferrimagnetic phase, which is on the order of s. The spiral
volume fraction measured for various temperatures reveals that the collinear
and the spiral ferrimagnetic phases are mixed below the transition temperature
of the spiral order. The temperature hysteresis in the volume fraction implies
that this transition has first-order characteristics.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figure
Storing unitary operators in quantum states
We present a scheme to store unitary operators with self-inverse generators
in quantum states and a general circuit to retrieve them with definite success
probability. The continuous variable of the operator is stored in a
single-qubit state and the information about the kind of the operator is stored
in classical states with finite dimension. The probability of successful
retrieval is always 1/2 irrespective of the kind of the operator, which is
proved to be maximum. In case of failure, the result can be corrected with
additional quantum states. The retrieving circuit is almost as simple as that
which handles only the single-qubit rotations and CNOT as the basic operations.
An interactive way to transfer quantum dynamics, that is, to distribute
naturally copy-protected programs for quantum computers is also presented using
this scheme.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, errors in Eq. (8) and Fig. 3 are fixed, to appear
in Phys. Rev.
Fidelity of Quantum Teleportation through Noisy Channels
We investigate quantum teleportation through noisy quantum channels by
solving analytically and numerically a master equation in the Lindblad form. We
calculate the fidelity as a function of decoherence rates and angles of a state
to be teleported. It is found that the average fidelity and the range of states
to be accurately teleported depend on types of noise acting on quantum
channels. If the quantum channels is subject to isotropic noise, the average
fidelity decays to 1/2, which is smaller than the best possible value 2/3
obtained only by the classical communication. On the other hand, if the noisy
quantum channel is modeled by a single Lindblad operator, the average fidelity
is always greater than 2/3.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Electron spin relaxations of phosphorus donors in bulk silicon under large electric field
Modulation of donor electron wavefunction via electric fields is vital to
quantum computing architectures based on donor spins in silicon. For practical
and scalable applications, the donor-based qubits must retain sufficiently long
coherence times in any realistic experimental conditions. Here, we present
pulsed electron spin resonance studies on the longitudinal and
transverse relaxation times of phosphorus donors in bulk silicon with
various electric field strengths up to near avalanche breakdown in high
magnetic fields of about 1.2 T and low temperatures of about 8 K. We find that
the relaxation time is significantly reduced under large electric fields
due to electric current, and is affected as the process can
dominate decoherence. Furthermore, we show that the magnetoresistance effect in
silicon can be exploited as a means to combat the reduction in the coherence
times. While qubit coherence times must be much longer than quantum gate times,
electrically accelerated can be found useful when qubit state
initialization relies on thermal equilibration.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figure
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