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Quantum Rep., Volume 2, Issue 4 (December 2020) – 9 articles

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17 pages, 370 KiB  
Article
Classical Logic in the Quantum Context
by Andrea Oldofredi
Quantum Rep. 2020, 2(4), 600-616; https://doi.org/10.3390/quantum2040042 - 5 Dec 2020
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 3813
Abstract
It is generally accepted that quantum mechanics entails a revision of the classical propositional calculus as a consequence of its physical content. However, the universal claim according to which a new quantum logic is indispensable in order to model the propositions of every [...] Read more.
It is generally accepted that quantum mechanics entails a revision of the classical propositional calculus as a consequence of its physical content. However, the universal claim according to which a new quantum logic is indispensable in order to model the propositions of every quantum theory is challenged. In the present essay, we critically discuss this claim by showing that classical logic can be rehabilitated in a quantum context by taking into account Bohmian mechanics. It will be argued, indeed, that such a theoretical framework provides the necessary conceptual tools to reintroduce a classical logic of experimental propositions by virtue of its clear metaphysical picture and its theory of measurement. More precisely, it will be shown that the rehabilitation of a classical propositional calculus is a consequence of the primitive ontology of the theory, a fact that is not yet sufficiently recognized in the literature concerning Bohmian mechanics. This work aims to fill this gap. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Exclusive Feature Papers of Quantum Reports)
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9 pages, 2362 KiB  
Letter
Avalanche Photodetector Based on InAs/InSb Superlattice
by Arash Dehzangi, Jiakai Li, Lakshay Gautam and Manijeh Razeghi
Quantum Rep. 2020, 2(4), 591-599; https://doi.org/10.3390/quantum2040041 - 4 Dec 2020
Cited by 17 | Viewed by 5199
Abstract
This work demonstrates a mid-wavelength infrared InAs/InSb superlattice avalanche photodiode (APD). The superlattice APD structure was grown by molecular beam epitaxy on GaSb substrate. The device exhibits a 100 % cut-off wavelength of 4.6 µm at 150 K and 4.30 µm at 77 [...] Read more.
This work demonstrates a mid-wavelength infrared InAs/InSb superlattice avalanche photodiode (APD). The superlattice APD structure was grown by molecular beam epitaxy on GaSb substrate. The device exhibits a 100 % cut-off wavelength of 4.6 µm at 150 K and 4.30 µm at 77 K. At 150 and 77 K, the device responsivity reaches peak values of 2.49 and 2.32 A/W at 3.75 µm under −1.0 V applied bias, respectively. The device reveals an electron dominated avalanching mechanism with a gain value of 6 at 150 K and 7.4 at 77 K which was observed under −6.5 V bias voltage. The gain value was measured at different temperatures and different diode sizes. The electron and hole impact ionization coefficients were calculated and compared to give a better prospect of the performance of the device. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Exclusive Feature Papers of Quantum Reports)
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12 pages, 887 KiB  
Review
Topological Photonics for Optical Communications and Quantum Computing
by Antonio Manzalini
Quantum Rep. 2020, 2(4), 579-590; https://doi.org/10.3390/quantum2040040 - 6 Nov 2020
Cited by 6 | Viewed by 4774
Abstract
The ongoing digital transformation is bringing a pervasive diffusion of ultra-broadband, fixed-mobile connectivity, the deployment of cloud-native Fifth Generation (5G) infrastructures, edge and fog computing and a wide adoption of artificial intelligence. This transformation will have far-reaching techno-economic impacts on our society and [...] Read more.
The ongoing digital transformation is bringing a pervasive diffusion of ultra-broadband, fixed-mobile connectivity, the deployment of cloud-native Fifth Generation (5G) infrastructures, edge and fog computing and a wide adoption of artificial intelligence. This transformation will have far-reaching techno-economic impacts on our society and industry. Nevertheless, this transformation is still laying its foundation in electronics and the impending end of Moore’s law. Therefore, looking at the future, a rethinking of the ways of doing computations and communications has already started. An extended adoption of quantum technologies is one possible direction of innovation. As a matter of fact, a first quantum revolution, started decades ago, has already brought quantum technologies into our daily lives. Indeed, today, a second revolution seems to be underway, exploiting advancements in the ability to detect and manipulate single quantum objects (e.g., photons, electrons, atoms and molecules). Among the different technological approaches, topological photonics is a rapidly growing field of innovation. Drawing inspiration from the discovery of the quantum Hall effect and topological insulators in condensed matter, recent advances in topological photonics hold a promising opportunity for optical networking and quantum computing applications. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Quantum Technologies for Future Internet)
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19 pages, 481 KiB  
Article
Higher-Order Information Measures from Cumulative Densities in Continuous Variable Quantum Systems
by Saúl J. C. Salazar, Humberto G. Laguna and Robin P. Sagar
Quantum Rep. 2020, 2(4), 560-578; https://doi.org/10.3390/quantum2040039 - 6 Nov 2020
Cited by 4 | Viewed by 3599
Abstract
A definition of three-variable cumulative residual entropy is introduced, and then used to obtain expressions for higher order or triple-wise correlation measures, that are based on cumulative residual densities. These information measures are calculated in continuous variable quantum systems comprised of three oscillators, [...] Read more.
A definition of three-variable cumulative residual entropy is introduced, and then used to obtain expressions for higher order or triple-wise correlation measures, that are based on cumulative residual densities. These information measures are calculated in continuous variable quantum systems comprised of three oscillators, and their behaviour compared to the analogous measures from Shannon information theory. There is an overall consistency in the behaviour of the newly introduced measures as compared to the Shannon ones. There are, however, differences in interpretation, in the case of three uncoupled oscillators, where the correlation is due to wave function symmetry. In interacting systems, the cumulative based measures are shown in order to detect salient features, which are also present in the Shannon based ones. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Exclusive Feature Papers of Quantum Reports)
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18 pages, 1007 KiB  
Article
Violation of Bell-CHSH Inequalities through Optimal Local Filters in the Vacuum
by Akira Matsumura and Yasusada Nambu
Quantum Rep. 2020, 2(4), 542-559; https://doi.org/10.3390/quantum2040038 - 5 Nov 2020
Cited by 4 | Viewed by 2918
Abstract
We investigate quantum correlations appearing for two-qubit detectors which are initially uncorrelated and locally coupled to a massless scalar field in a vacuum state. Under the perturbation up to the second order in the coupling, the state of the detectors can be entangled [...] Read more.
We investigate quantum correlations appearing for two-qubit detectors which are initially uncorrelated and locally coupled to a massless scalar field in a vacuum state. Under the perturbation up to the second order in the coupling, the state of the detectors can be entangled through the interaction with the scalar field but satisfies the Bell-CHSH inequality. The violation of the Bell-CHSH inequality for such an entangled state is revealed by local filtering operations. In this paper, we construct the optimal filtering operations for the qubit detectors and derive the success probability of the filtering. The success probability characterizes the reliability of revealing the violation of the Bell-CHSH inequality by the filtering operations. Through these analyses, we demonstrate a trade-off relation between the success probability and the size of parameter region showing the violation of the Bell-CHSH inequality. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Exclusive Feature Papers of Quantum Reports)
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13 pages, 602 KiB  
Article
Temperature-Fermion Number Correlations in Finite Paired Systems
by Angelo Plastino, Diana Monteoliva and Angel R. Plastino
Quantum Rep. 2020, 2(4), 529-541; https://doi.org/10.3390/quantum2040037 - 5 Nov 2020
Viewed by 2439
Abstract
We investigate finite systems of N paired fermions, common in atomic nuclei, for example. These systems exhibit quantum mechanical features akin to those of superconductors. We discover, however, some specific N dependent effects that can not be attained in the thermodynamics limit of [...] Read more.
We investigate finite systems of N paired fermions, common in atomic nuclei, for example. These systems exhibit quantum mechanical features akin to those of superconductors. We discover, however, some specific N dependent effects that can not be attained in the thermodynamics limit of ordinary superconductivity. In particular, an important fact is uncovered: there is a strong correlation between the temperature T and the number of fermions N. A certain temperature increase ΔT produces, in thermal quantifiers (such as the entropy), quite different effects if N=4 or N=25. In fact, whether a given temperature value should be regarded as high or low can not be ascertained independent of the N value. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Exclusive Feature Papers of Quantum Reports)
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15 pages, 925 KiB  
Article
Nonlocal Interferences Induced by the Phase of the Wavefunction for a Particle in a Cavity with Moving Boundaries
by Mordecai Waegell and Alex Matzkin
Quantum Rep. 2020, 2(4), 514-528; https://doi.org/10.3390/quantum2040036 - 30 Oct 2020
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 2719
Abstract
We investigate the dynamics of a particle in a confined periodic system—a time-dependent oscillator confined by infinitely high and moving walls—and focus on the evolution of the phase of the wavefunction. It is shown that, for some specific initial states in this potential, [...] Read more.
We investigate the dynamics of a particle in a confined periodic system—a time-dependent oscillator confined by infinitely high and moving walls—and focus on the evolution of the phase of the wavefunction. It is shown that, for some specific initial states in this potential, the phase of the wavefunction throughout the cavity depends on the walls motion. We further elaborate a thought experiment based on interferences devised to detect this form of single-particle nonlocality from a relative phase. We point out that, within the non-relativistic formalism based on the Schrödinger equation (SE), detecting this form of nonlocality can give rise to signaling. We believe this effect is an artifact, but the standard relativistic corrections to the SE do not appear to fix it. Specific illustrations are given, with analytical results in the adiabatic approximation, and numerical computations to show that contributions from high-energy states (corresponding to superluminal velocities) are negligible. Full article
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13 pages, 365 KiB  
Article
Generalizing Wave-Particle Duality: Two-Qubit Extension of the Polarization Coherence Theorem
by Francisco De Zela
Quantum Rep. 2020, 2(4), 501-513; https://doi.org/10.3390/quantum2040035 - 26 Oct 2020
Cited by 5 | Viewed by 3394
Abstract
We present an extension of the polarization coherence theorem (PCT) for the case in which two qubits play similarly important roles. The standard version of the PCT: V2+D2=P2, involves three measures, visibility V, distinguishability [...] Read more.
We present an extension of the polarization coherence theorem (PCT) for the case in which two qubits play similarly important roles. The standard version of the PCT: V2+D2=P2, involves three measures, visibility V, distinguishability D, and the degree of polarization P, all of which refer to a single qubit, regardless of its physical realization. This is also the case with the inequality that is implied by the PCT: V2+D21, which was originally derived in an attempt to quantify Bohr’s complementarity principle. We show that all of these constraints hold true, no matter how the involved qubits are physically realized, either as quantum or else as classical objects. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Exclusive Feature Papers of Quantum Reports)
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12 pages, 1895 KiB  
Article
Photonic Spin Hall Effect: Contribution of Polarization Mixing Caused by Anisotropy
by Maxim Mazanov, Oleh Yermakov, Ilya Deriy, Osamu Takayama, Andrey Bogdanov and Andrei V. Lavrinenko
Quantum Rep. 2020, 2(4), 489-500; https://doi.org/10.3390/quantum2040034 - 23 Sep 2020
Cited by 27 | Viewed by 4396
Abstract
Spin-orbital interaction of light attracts much attention in nanophotonics opening new horizons for modern optical systems and devices. The photonic spin Hall effect or Imbert-Fedorov shift takes a special place among the variety of spin-orbital interaction phenomena. It exhibits as a polarization-dependent transverse [...] Read more.
Spin-orbital interaction of light attracts much attention in nanophotonics opening new horizons for modern optical systems and devices. The photonic spin Hall effect or Imbert-Fedorov shift takes a special place among the variety of spin-orbital interaction phenomena. It exhibits as a polarization-dependent transverse light shift usually observed in specular scattering of light at interfaces with anisotropic materials. Nevertheless, the effect of the polarization mixing caused by anisotropy on the Imbert-Fedorov shift is commonly underestimated. In this work, we demonstrate that polarization mixing contribution cannot be ignored for a broad range of optical systems. In particular, we show the dominant influence of the mixing term over the standard one for the polarized optical beam incident at a quarter-wave plate within the paraxial approximation. Moreover, our study reveals a novel contribution with extraordinary polarization dependence not observable within the simplified approach. We believe that these results advance the understanding of photonic spin Hall effect and open new opportunities for spin-dependent optical phenomena. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Spin Hall Effect in Photonic Materials)
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