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1.
Phys Rev Lett ; 126(7): 070501, 2021 Feb 19.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33666445

RESUMO

We develop a coherent beam splitter for single electrons driven through two tunnel-coupled quantum wires by surface acoustic waves (SAWs). The output current through each wire oscillates with gate voltages to tune the tunnel coupling and potential difference between the wires. This oscillation is assigned to coherent electron tunneling motion that can be used to encode a flying qubit and is well reproduced by numerical calculations of time evolution of the SAW-driven single electrons. The oscillation visibility is currently limited to about 3%, but robust against decoherence, indicating that the SAW electron can serve as a novel platform for a solid-state flying qubit.

2.
Phys Rev Lett ; 125(4): 047701, 2020 Jul 24.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32794820

RESUMO

Decoherence of a quantum system arising from its interaction with an environment is a key concept for understanding the transition between the quantum and classical world as well as performance limitations in quantum technology applications. The effects of large, weakly coupled environments are often described as a classical, fluctuating field whose dynamics is unaffected by the qubit, whereas a fully quantum description still implies some backaction from the qubit on the environment. Here we show direct experimental evidence for such a backaction for an electron-spin qubit in a GaAs quantum dot coupled to a mesoscopic environment of order 10^{6} nuclear spins. By means of a correlation measurement technique, we detect the backaction of a single qubit-environment interaction whose duration is comparable to the qubit's coherence time, even in such a large system. We repeatedly let the qubit interact with the spin bath and measure its state. Between such cycles, the qubit is reinitialized to different states. The correlations of the measurement outcomes are strongly affected by the intermediate qubit state, which reveals the action of a single electron spin on the nuclear spins.

3.
Phys Rev Lett ; 122(24): 247403, 2019 Jun 21.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31322370

RESUMO

The maximum information of a dynamic quantum system is given by real-time detection of every quantum event, where the ultimate challenge is a stable, sensitive detector with high bandwidth. All physical information can then be drawn from a statistical analysis of the time traces. We demonstrate here an optical detection scheme based on the time-resolved resonance fluorescence on a single quantum dot. Single-electron resolution with high signal-to-noise ratio (4σ confidence) and high bandwidth of 10 kHz make it possible to record the individual quantum events of the transport dynamics. Full counting statistics with factorial cumulants gives access to the nonequilibrium dynamics of spin relaxation of a singly charged dot (γ_{↑↓}=3 ms^{-1}), even in an equilibrium transport measurement.

4.
Nature ; 501(7465): 79-83, 2013 Sep 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23995683

RESUMO

A quantum point contact (QPC) is a basic nanometre-scale electronic device: a short and narrow transport channel between two electron reservoirs. In clean channels, electron transport is ballistic and the conductance is then quantized as a function of channel width with plateaux at integer multiples of 2e(2)/h (where e is the electron charge and h is Planck's constant). This can be understood in a picture where the electron states are propagating waves, without the need to account for electron-electron interactions. Quantized conductance could thus be the signature of ultimate control over nanoscale electron transport. However, even studies with the cleanest QPCs generically show significant anomalies in the quantized conductance traces, and there is consensus that these result from electron many-body effects. Despite extensive experimental and theoretical studies, understanding these anomalies is an open problem. Here we report that the many-body effects have their origin in one or more spontaneously localized states that emerge from Friedel oscillations in the electron charge density within the QPC channel. These localized states will have electron spins associated with them, and the Kondo effect--related to electron transport through such localized electron spins--contributes to the formation of the many-body state. We present evidence for such localization, with Kondo effects of odd or even character, directly reflecting the parity of the number of localized states; the evidence is obtained from experiments with length-tunable QPCs that show a periodic modulation of the many-body properties with Kondo signatures that alternate between odd and even Kondo effects. Our results are of importance for assessing the role of QPCs in more complex hybrid devices and for proposals for spintronic and quantum information applications. In addition, our results show that tunable QPCs offer a versatile platform for investigating many-body effects in nanoscale systems, with the ability to probe such physics at the level of a single site.

5.
Phys Rev Lett ; 120(3): 033903, 2018 Jan 19.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29400537

RESUMO

We demonstrate superresolution imaging of single rare-earth emitting centers, namely, trivalent cerium, in yttrium aluminum garnet crystals by means of stimulated emission depletion (STED) microscopy. The achieved all-optical resolution is ≈50 nm. Similar results were obtained on H3 color centers in diamond. In both cases, STED resolution is improving slower than the conventional inverse square-root dependence on the depletion beam intensity. In the proposed model of this effect, the anomalous behavior is caused by excited state absorption and the interaction of the emitter with nonfluorescing crystal defects in its local surrounding.

6.
Phys Rev Lett ; 118(14): 146801, 2017 Apr 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28430471

RESUMO

We investigate the relationship between the Zeeman interaction and the inversion-asymmetry-induced spin-orbit interactions (Rashba and Dresselhaus SOIs) in GaAs hole quantum point contacts. The presence of a strong SOI results in the crossing and anticrossing of adjacent spin-split hole subbands in a magnetic field. We demonstrate theoretically and experimentally that the anticrossing energy gap depends on the interplay between the SOI terms and the highly anisotropic hole g tensor and that this interplay can be tuned by selecting the crystal axis along which the current and magnetic field are aligned. Our results constitute the independent detection and control of the Dresselhaus and Rashba SOIs in hole systems, which could be of importance for spintronics and quantum information applications.

7.
Phys Rev Lett ; 117(1): 017401, 2016 Jul 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27419589

RESUMO

Time-resolved resonance fluorescence (RF) is used to analyze electron tunneling between a single self-assembled quantum dot (QD) and an electron reservoir. In equilibrium, the RF intensity reflects the average electron occupation of the QD and exhibits a gate voltage dependence that is given by the Fermi distribution in the reservoir. In the time-resolved signal, however, we find that the relaxation rate for electron tunneling is, surprisingly, independent of the occupation in the charge reservoir-in contrast to results from all-electrical transport measurements. Using a master equation approach, which includes both the electron tunneling and the optical excitation or recombination, we are able to explain the experimental data by optical blocking, which also reduces the electron tunneling rate when the QD is occupied by an exciton.

8.
Phys Rev Lett ; 116(4): 046802, 2016 Jan 29.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26871350

RESUMO

We extract the phase coherence of a qubit defined by singlet and triplet electronic states in a gated GaAs triple quantum dot, measuring on time scales much shorter than the decorrelation time of the environmental noise. In this nonergodic regime, we observe that the coherence is boosted and several dephasing times emerge, depending on how the phase stability is extracted. We elucidate their mutual relations, and demonstrate that they reflect the noise short-time dynamics.

9.
Phys Rev Lett ; 117(20): 206802, 2016 Nov 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27886503

RESUMO

We detect in real time interdot tunneling events in a weakly coupled two-electron double quantum dot in GaAs. At finite magnetic fields, we observe two characteristic tunneling times T_{d} and T_{b}, belonging to, respectively, a direct and a blocked (spin-flip-assisted) tunneling. The latter corresponds to the lifting of a Pauli spin blockade, and the tunneling times ratio η=T_{b}/T_{d} characterizes the blockade efficiency. We find pronounced changes in the behavior of η upon increasing the magnetic field, with η increasing, saturating, and increasing again. We explain this behavior as due to the crossover of the dominant blockade-lifting mechanism from the hyperfine to spin-orbit interactions and due to a change in the contribution of the charge decoherence.

10.
Nanotechnology ; 27(42): 425702, 2016 Oct 21.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27622774

RESUMO

We report on a high resolution x-ray diffraction study unveiling the effect of carriers optically injected into (In,Ga)As quantum dots on the surrounding GaAs crystal matrix. We find a tetragonal lattice expansion with enhanced elongation along the [001] crystal axis that is superimposed on an isotropic lattice extension. The isotropic contribution arises from excitation induced lattice heating as confirmed by temperature dependent reference studies. The tetragonal expansion on the femtometer scale is tentatively attributed to polaron formation by carriers trapped in the quantum dots.

11.
Parasitol Res ; 115(5): 2023-34, 2016 May.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26852124

RESUMO

Besnoitia besnoiti is an obligate intracellular and emerging coccidian parasite of cattle with a significant economic impact on cattle industry. During acute infection, fast-proliferating tachyzoites are continuously formed mainly in endothelial host cells of infected animals. Given that offspring formation is a highly energy and cell building block demanding process, the parasite needs to exploit host cellular metabolism to meet its metabolic demands. Here, we analyzed the metabolic signatures of B. besnoiti-infected endothelial host cells and aimed to influence parasite proliferation by inhibitors of specific metabolic pathways. The following inhibitors were tested: fluoro 2-deoxy-D-glucose and 2-deoxy-D-glucose (FDG, DG; inhibitors of glycolysis), 6-diazo-5-oxo-L-norleucin (DON; inhibitor of glutaminolysis), dichloroacetate (DCA; inhibitor of pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase which favorites channeling of glucose carbons into the TCA cycle) and adenosine-monophosphate (AMP; inhibitor of ribose 5-P synthesis). Overall, B. besnoiti infections of bovine endothelial cells induced a significant and infection rate-dependent increase of glucose, lactate, glutamine, glutamate, pyruvate, alanine, and serine conversion rates which together indicate a parasite-triggered up-regulation of glycolysis and glutaminolysis. Thus, addition of DON, FDG, and DG into the cultivation medium of B. besnoiti infected endothelial cells led to a dose-dependent inhibition of parasite replication (4 µM DON, 99.5 % inhibition; 2 mM FDG, 99.1 % inhibition; 2 mM DG, 93 % inhibition; and 8 mM DCA, 71.9 % inhibition). In contrast, AMP had no significant effects on total tachyzoite production up to a concentration of 20 mM. Together, these data may open new strategies for the development of therapeutics for B. besnoiti infections.


Assuntos
Doenças dos Bovinos/parasitologia , Coccidiose/veterinária , Endotélio Vascular/parasitologia , Glutamina/metabolismo , Sarcocystidae/metabolismo , Animais , Anticorpos Antiprotozoários/metabolismo , Bovinos , Doenças dos Bovinos/metabolismo , Coccidiose/metabolismo , Endotélio Vascular/metabolismo , Glicólise , Técnicas In Vitro , Redes e Vias Metabólicas/efeitos dos fármacos , Sarcocystidae/imunologia
12.
Opt Express ; 23(22): 29079-88, 2015 Nov 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26561177

RESUMO

Strain-compensated CdSe/ZnSe/(Zn,Mg)Se quantum well structures that were grown on (In,Ga)As allow for efficient room-temperature photoluminescence and spectral tuning over the whole visible range. We fabricated microdisk cavities from these samples by making use of a challenging chemical structuring technique for selective and homogeneous removal of the (In,Ga)As sacrificial layer below the quantum structure. The observed whispering gallery modes in our microdisks are mainly visible up to photon energies of ~ 2.3 eV due to strong self-absorption. As extinction coefficients and effective refractive indices are dominated by the quantum well material CdSe, thick quantum wells (> 3 monolayer) are necessary to observe resonances in the corresponding quantum well emission.

13.
Phys Rev Lett ; 115(17): 176601, 2015 Oct 23.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26551132

RESUMO

We present spin-noise spectroscopy measurements on an ensemble of donor-bound electrons in ultrapure GaAs:Si covering temporal dynamics over 6 orders of magnitude from milliseconds to nanoseconds. The spin-noise spectra detected at the donor-bound exciton transition show the multifaceted dynamical regime of the ubiquitous mutual electron and nuclear spin interaction typical for III-V-based semiconductor systems. The experiment distinctly reveals the finite Overhauser shift of an electron spin precession at zero external magnetic field and a second contribution around zero frequency stemming from the electron spin components parallel to the nuclear spin fluctuations. Moreover, at very low frequencies, features related with time-dependent nuclear spin fluctuations are clearly resolved making it possible to study the intricate nuclear spin dynamics at zero and low magnetic fields. The findings are in agreement with the developed model of electron and nuclear spin noise.

14.
Phys Rev Lett ; 112(4): 046803, 2014 Jan 31.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24580478

RESUMO

We present capacitance-voltage spectra for the conduction band states of InAs quantum dots obtained under continuous illumination. The illumination leads to the appearance of additional charging peaks that we attribute to the charging of electrons into quantum dots containing a variable number of illumination-induced holes. By this we demonstrate an electrical measurement of excitonic states in quantum dots. Magnetocapacitance-voltage spectroscopy reveals that the electron always tunnels into the lowest electronic state. This allows us to directly extract, from the highly correlated many-body states, the correlation energy. The results are compared quantitatively to state of the art atomistic configuration interaction calculations, showing very good agreement for a lower level of excitations and also limitations of the approach for an increasing number of particles. Our experiments offer a rare benchmark to many-body theoretical calculations.

15.
Phys Rev Lett ; 113(12): 126601, 2014 Sep 19.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25279636

RESUMO

We report on the direct observation of the transmission phase shift through a Kondo correlated quantum dot by employing a new type of two-path interferometer. We observed a clear π/2-phase shift, which persists up to the Kondo temperature TK. Above this temperature, the phase shifts by more than π/2 at each Coulomb peak, approaching the behavior observed for the standard Coulomb blockade regime. These observations are in remarkable agreement with two-level numerical renormalization group calculations. The unique combination of experimental and theoretical results presented here fully elucidates the phase evolution in the Kondo regime.

16.
Nano Lett ; 13(1): 148-52, 2013 Jan 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23256546

RESUMO

The out-of-plane g-factor g([perpendicular])(*) for quasi two-dimensional (2D) holes in a (100) GaAs heterostructure is studied using a variable width quantum wire. A direct measurement of the Zeeman splitting is performed in a magnetic field applied perpendicular to the 2D plane. We measure an out-of-plane g-factor up to g([perpendicular])(*) = 5, which is larger than previous optical studies of g([perpendicular])(*) and is approaching the long predicted but never experimentally verified out-of-plane g-factor of 7.2 for heavy holes.

17.
Phys Rev Lett ; 110(17): 176601, 2013 Apr 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23679751

RESUMO

Spontaneous fluctuations of the magnetization of a spin system in thermodynamic equilibrium (spin noise) manifest themselves as noise in the Faraday rotation of probe light. We show that the correlation properties of this noise over the optical spectrum can provide clear information about the composition of the spin system that is largely inaccessible for conventional linear optics. Such optical spectroscopy of spin noise, e.g., allows us to clearly distinguish between optical transitions associated with different spin subsystems, to resolve optical transitions that are unresolvable in the usual optical spectra, to unambiguously distinguish between homogeneously and inhomogeneously broadened optical bands, and to evaluate the degree of inhomogeneous broadening. These new possibilities are illustrated by theoretical calculations and by experiments on paramagnets with different degrees of inhomogeneous broadening of optical transitions [atomic vapors of 41K and singly charged (In,Ga)As quantum dots].

18.
Phys Rev Lett ; 110(26): 266803, 2013 Jun 28.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23848908

RESUMO

We demonstrate one and two photoelectron trapping and the subsequent dynamics associated with interdot transfer in double quantum dots over a time scale much shorter than the typical spin lifetime. Identification of photoelectron trapping is achieved via resonant interdot tunneling of the photoelectrons in the excited states. The interdot transfer enables detection of single photoelectrons in a nondestructive manner. When two photoelectrons are trapped at almost the same time we observed that the interdot resonant tunneling is strongly affected by the Coulomb interaction between the electrons. Finally the influence of the two-electron singlet-triplet state hybridization has been detected using the interdot tunneling of a photoelectron.

19.
Phys Rev Lett ; 110(12): 127403, 2013 Mar 22.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25166847

RESUMO

Voltage-tunable quantum traps confining individual spatially indirect and long-living excitons are realized by providing a coupled double quantum well with nanoscale gates. This enables us to study the transition from confined multiexcitons down to a single, electrostatically trapped indirect exciton. In the few exciton regime, we observe discrete emission lines identified as resulting from a single dipolar exciton, a biexciton, and a triexciton, respectively. Their energetic splitting is well described by Wigner-like molecular structures reflecting the interplay of dipolar interexcitonic repulsion and spatial quantization.

20.
Sci Rep ; 13(1): 1105, 2023 Jan 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36670214

RESUMO

Single electron tunneling and its transport statistics have been studied for some time using high precision charge detectors. However, this type of detection requires advanced lithography, optimized material systems and low temperatures (mK). A promising alternative, recently demonstrated, is to exploit an optical transition that is turned on or off when a tunnel event occurs. High bandwidths should be achievable with this approach, although this has not been adequately investigated so far. We have studied low temperature resonance fluorescence from a self-assembled quantum dot embedded in a diode structure. We detect single photons from the dot in real time and evaluate the recorded data only after the experiment, using post-processing to obtain the random telegraph signal of the electron transport. This is a significant difference from commonly used charge detectors and allows us to determine the optimal time resolution for analyzing our data. We show how this post-processing affects both the determination of tunneling rates using waiting-time distributions and statistical analysis using full-counting statistics. We also demonstrate, as an example, that we can analyze our data with bandwidths as high as 175 kHz. Using a simple model, we discuss the limiting factors for achieving the optimal bandwidth and propose how a time resolution of more than 1 MHz could be achieved.


Assuntos
Fótons , Pontos Quânticos , Fluorescência
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