744 research outputs found
Digital Quantum Rabi and Dicke Models in Superconducting Circuits
We propose the analog-digital quantum simulation of the quantum Rabi and
Dicke models using circuit quantum electrodynamics (QED). We find that all
physical regimes, in particular those which are impossible to realize in
typical cavity QED setups, can be simulated via unitary decomposition into
digital steps. Furthermore, we show the emergence of the Dirac equation
dynamics from the quantum Rabi model when the mode frequency vanishes. Finally,
we analyze the feasibility of this proposal under realistic superconducting
circuit scenarios.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures. Published in Scientific Report
Selective darkening of degenerate transitions for implementing quantum controlled-NOT gates
We present a theoretical analysis of the selective darkening method for
implementing quantum controlled-NOT (CNOT) gates. This method, which we
recently proposed and demonstrated, consists of driving two
transversely-coupled quantum bits (qubits) with a driving field that is
resonant with one of the two qubits. For specific relative amplitudes and
phases of the driving field felt by the two qubits, one of the two transitions
in the degenerate pair is darkened, or in other words, becomes forbidden by
effective selection rules. At these driving conditions, the evolution of the
two-qubit state realizes a CNOT gate. The gate speed is found to be limited
only by the coupling energy J, which is the fundamental speed limit for any
entangling gate. Numerical simulations show that at gate speeds corresponding
to 0.48J and 0.07J, the gate fidelity is 99% and 99.99%, respectively, and
increases further for lower gate speeds. In addition, the effect of
higher-lying energy levels and weak anharmonicity is studied, as well as the
scalability of the method to systems of multiple qubits. We conclude that in
all these respects this method is competitive with existing schemes for
creating entanglement, with the added advantages of being applicable for qubits
operating at fixed frequencies (either by design or for exploitation of
coherence sweet-spots) and having the simplicity of microwave-only operation.Comment: 25 pages, 5 figure
Realization of microwave quantum circuits using hybrid superconducting-semiconducting nanowire Josephson elements
We report the realization of quantum microwave circuits using hybrid
superconductor-semiconductor Josephson elements comprised of InAs nanowires
contacted by NbTiN. Capacitively-shunted single elements behave as transmon
qubits with electrically tunable transition frequencies. Two-element circuits
also exhibit transmon-like behavior near zero applied flux, but behave as flux
qubits at half the flux quantum, where non-sinusoidal current-phase relations
in the elements produce a double-well Josephson potential. These hybrid
Josephson elements are promising for applications requiring microwave
superconducting circuits operating in magnetic field.Comment: Main text: 4 pages, 4 figures; Supplement: 10 pages, 8 figures, 1
tabl
X-Ray Scattering Measurements of the Transient Structure of a Driven Charge-Density-Wave
We report time-resolved x-ray scattering measurements of the transient
structural response of the sliding {\bf Q} charge-density-wave (CDW) in
NbSe to a reversal of the driving electric field. The observed time scale
characterizing this response at 70K varies from 15 msec for driving
fields near threshold to 2 msec for fields well above threshold. The
position and time-dependent strain of the CDW is analyzed in terms of a
phenomenological equation of motion for the phase of the CDW order parameter.
The value of the damping constant, eV
seconds \AA, is in excellent agreement with the value
determined from transport measurements. As the driving field approaches
threshold from above, the line shape becomes bimodal, suggesting that the CDW
does not depin throughout the entire sample at one well-defined voltage.Comment: revtex 3.0, 7 figure
Noise Stabilization of Self-Organized Memories
We investigate a nonlinear dynamical system which ``remembers'' preselected
values of a system parameter. The deterministic version of the system can
encode many parameter values during a transient period, but in the limit of
long times, almost all of them are forgotten. Here we show that a certain type
of stochastic noise can stabilize multiple memories, enabling many parameter
values to be encoded permanently. We present analytic results that provide
insight both into the memory formation and into the noise-induced memory
stabilization. The relevance of our results to experiments on the
charge-density wave material is discussed.Comment: 29 pages, 6 figures, submitted to Physical Review
Quantum Non-demolition Detection of Single Microwave Photons in a Circuit
Thorough control of quantum measurement is key to the development of quantum
information technologies. Many measurements are destructive, removing more
information from the system than they obtain. Quantum non-demolition (QND)
measurements allow repeated measurements that give the same eigenvalue. They
could be used for several quantum information processing tasks such as error
correction, preparation by measurement, and one-way quantum computing.
Achieving QND measurements of photons is especially challenging because the
detector must be completely transparent to the photons while still acquiring
information about them. Recent progress in manipulating microwave photons in
superconducting circuits has increased demand for a QND detector which operates
in the gigahertz frequency range. Here we demonstrate a QND detection scheme
which measures the number of photons inside a high quality-factor microwave
cavity on a chip. This scheme maps a photon number onto a qubit state in a
single-shot via qubit-photon logic gates. We verify the operation of the device
by analyzing the average correlations of repeated measurements, and show that
it is 90% QND. It differs from previously reported detectors because its
sensitivity is strongly selective to chosen photon number states. This scheme
could be used to monitor the state of a photon-based memory in a quantum
computer.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, includes supplementary materia
Implementation of a Toffoli Gate with Superconducting Circuits
The quantum Toffoli gate allows universal reversible classical computation.
It is also an important primitive in many quantum circuits and quantum error
correction schemes. Here we demonstrate the realization of a Toffoli gate with
three superconducting transmon qubits coupled to a microwave resonator. By
exploiting the third energy level of the transmon qubit, the number of
elementary gates needed for the implementation of the Toffoli gate, as well as
the total gate time can be reduced significantly in comparison to theoretical
proposals using two-level systems only. We characterize the performance of the
gate by full process tomography and Monte Carlo process certification. The gate
fidelity is found to be %.Comment: 4 pages, 5figure
Friedel Oscillations and Charge-density Waves Pinning in Quasi-one-dimensional Conductors: An X-ray Access
We present an x-ray diffraction study of the Vanadium-doped blue bronze
K0.3(Mo0.972V0.028)O3. At low temperature, we have observed both an intensity
asymmetry of the +-2kF satellite reflections relative to the pure compound, and
a profile asymmetry of each satellite reflections. We show that the profile
asymmetry is due to Friedel oscillation around the V substituant and that the
intensity asymmetry is related to the charge density wave (CDW) pinning. These
two effects, intensity and profile asymmetries, gives for the first time access
to the local properties of CDW in disordered systems, including the pinning and
even the phase shift of FOs.Comment: 4 pages REVTEX, 5 figure
Crossover from 2-dimensional to 1-dimensional collective pinning in NbSe3
We have fabricated NbSe structures with widths comparable to the
Fukuyama-Lee-Rice phase-coherence length. For samples already in the
2-dimensional pinning limit, we observe a crossover from 2-dimensional to
1-dimensional collective pinning when the crystal width is less than 1.6
m, corresponding to the phase-coherence length in this direction. Our
results show that surface pinning is negligible in our samples, and provide a
means to probe the dynamics of single domains giving access to a new regime in
charge-density wave physics.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, and 1 table. Accepted for publication in Physical
Review
Computing prime factors with a Josephson phase qubit quantum processor
A quantum processor (QuP) can be used to exploit quantum mechanics to find
the prime factors of composite numbers[1]. Compiled versions of Shor's
algorithm have been demonstrated on ensemble quantum systems[2] and photonic
systems[3-5], however this has yet to be shown using solid state quantum bits
(qubits). Two advantages of superconducting qubit architectures are the use of
conventional microfabrication techniques, which allow straightforward scaling
to large numbers of qubits, and a toolkit of circuit elements that can be used
to engineer a variety of qubit types and interactions[6, 7]. Using a number of
recent qubit control and hardware advances [7-13], here we demonstrate a
nine-quantum-element solid-state QuP and show three experiments to highlight
its capabilities. We begin by characterizing the device with spectroscopy.
Next, we produces coherent interactions between five qubits and verify bi- and
tripartite entanglement via quantum state tomography (QST) [8, 12, 14, 15]. In
the final experiment, we run a three-qubit compiled version of Shor's algorithm
to factor the number 15, and successfully find the prime factors 48% of the
time. Improvements in the superconducting qubit coherence times and more
complex circuits should provide the resources necessary to factor larger
composite numbers and run more intricate quantum algorithms.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
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