436 research outputs found
Theory of RF-spectroscopy of strongly interacting Fermions
We show that strong pairing correlations in Fermi gases lead to the
appearance of a gap-like structure in the RF-spectrum, both in the balanced
superfluid and in the normal phase above the Clogston-Chandrasekhar limit. The
average RF-shift of a unitary gas is proportional to the ratio of the Fermi
velocity and the scattering length with the final state. In the strongly
imbalanced case, the RF-spectrum measures the binding energy of a minority atom
to the Fermi sea of majority atoms. Our results provide a qualitative
understanding of recent experiments by Schunck et.al.Comment: revised version, 4 pages, 3 figures, RevTex
Extended Bose-Hubbard model with incompressible states at fractional numbers
The Bose-Hubbard model is extended to include nearest and far neighbor
interactions and is related to the fractional quantum Hall effect (FQHE). Both
models may be studied in optical lattices with quantum gases. The ground state
is calculated for the extended Bose-Hubbard model with strong repulsive
interactions (weak hopping). Incompressible Mott insulator states are found at
rational filling fractions compatible with the principal and secondary FQHE
filling fractions of the lowest Landau levels observed experimentally. It is
discussed to which extent these states at fractional filling survive or
undergoes a Mott insulator transition to a superfluid as hopping terms are
included.Comment: Revised version, to appear in PR
Universal and optimal error thresholds for measurement-based entanglement purification
We investigate measurement-based entanglement purification protocols (EPP) in
the presence of local noise and imperfections. We derive a universal,
protocol-independent threshold for the required quality of the local resource
states, where we show that local noise per particle of up to 24% is tolerable.
This corresponds to an increase of the noise threshold by almost an order of
magnitude, based on the joint measurement-based implementation of sequential
rounds of few-particle EPP. We generalize our results to multipartite EPP,
where we encounter similarly high error thresholds
Spatial correlations of trapped 1d bosons in an optical lattice
We investigate a quasi-one dimensional system of trapped cold bosonic atoms
in an optical lattice by using the density matrix renormalization group to
study the Bose-Hubbard model at T=0 for experimentally realistic numbers of
lattice sites. It is shown that a properly rescaled one-particle density matrix
characterizes superfluid versus insulating states just as in the homogeneous
system. For typical parabolic traps we also confirm the widely used local
density approach for describing correlations in the limit of weak interaction.
Finally, we note that the superfluid to Mott-insulating transition is seen most
directly in the half width of the interference peak
Measurement-based quantum repeaters
We introduce measurement-based quantum repeaters, where small-scale
measurement-based quantum processors are used to perform entanglement
purification and entanglement swapping in a long-range quantum communication
protocol. In the scheme, pre-prepared entangled states stored at intermediate
repeater stations are coupled with incoming photons by simple
Bell-measurements, without the need of performing additional quantum gates or
measurements. We show how to construct the required resource states, and how to
minimize their size. We analyze the performance of the scheme under noise and
imperfections, with focus on small-scale implementations involving entangled
states of few qubits. We find measurement-based purification protocols with
significantly improved noise thresholds. Furthermore we show that already
resource states of small size suffice to significantly increase the maximal
communication distance. We also discuss possible advantages of our scheme for
different set-ups
Simple proof of confidentiality for private quantum channels in noisy environments
Complete security proofs for quantum communication protocols can be
notoriously involved, which convolutes their verification, and obfuscates the
key physical insights the security finally relies on. In such cases, for the
majority of the community, the utility of such proofs may be restricted. Here
we provide a simple proof of confidentiality for parallel quantum channels
established via entanglement distillation based on hashing, in the presence of
noise, and a malicious eavesdropper who is restricted only by the laws of
quantum mechanics. The direct contribution lies in improving the linear
confidentiality levels of recurrence-type entanglement distillation protocols
to exponential levels for hashing protocols. The proof directly exploits the
security relevant physical properties: measurement-based quantum computation
with resource states and the separation of Bell-pairs from an eavesdropper. The
proof also holds for situations where Eve has full control over the input
states, and obtains all information about the operations and noise applied by
the parties. The resulting state after hashing is private, i.e., disentangled
from the eavesdropper. Moreover, the noise regimes for entanglement
distillation and confidentiality do not coincide: Confidentiality can be
guaranteed even in situation where entanglement distillation fails. We extend
our results to multiparty situations which are of special interest for secure
quantum networks.Comment: 5 + 11 pages, 0 + 4 figures, A. Pirker and M. Zwerger contributed
equally to this work, replaced with accepted versio
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