H. von der Schmitt 99 , J. von Loeben 99 , H. von Radziewski 48 , E. von Toerne 20 , V. Vorobel 126 , V. Vorwerk 11 , M. Vos 166 , R. Voss 29 , T.T. Voss 173 , J.H. Vossebeld 73 , N. Vranjes 12a , M. Vranjes Milosavljevic 12a , V. Vrba 125 , M. Vreeswijk 105 , T. Abstract The simulation software for the ATLAS Experiment at the Large Hadron Collider is being used for large-scale production of events on the LHC Computing Grid. This simulation requires many components, from the generators that simulate particle collisions, through packages simulating the response of the various detectors and triggers. All of these components come together under the ATLAS simulation infrastructure. In this paper, that infrastructure is discussed, including that supporting the detector description , interfacing the event generation, and combining the GEANT4 simulation of the response of the individual detectors. Also described are the tools allowing the software validation, performance testing, and the validation of the simulated output against known physics processes.
Recent progress in nanophotonics includes demonstrations of meta-materials displaying negative refraction at optical frequencies, directional single photon sources, plasmonic analogies of electromagnetically induced transparency and spectacular Fano resonances. The physics behind these intriguing effects is to a large extent governed by the same single parameter—optical phase. Here we describe a nanophotonic structure built from pairs of closely spaced gold and silver disks that show phase accumulation through material-dependent plasmon resonances. The bimetallic dimers show exotic optical properties, in particular scattering of red and blue light in opposite directions, in spite of being as compact as ∼λ3/100. These spectral and spatial photon-sorting nanodevices can be fabricated on a wafer scale and offer a versatile platform for manipulating optical response through polarization, choice of materials and geometrical parameters, thereby opening possibilities for a wide range of practical applications.
Quantum computing experiments are moving into a new realm of increasing size and complexity, with the short-term goal of demonstrating an advantage over classical computers. Boson sampling is a promising platform for such a goal, however, the number of involved single photons was up to five so far, limiting these small-scale implementations to a proof-of-principle stage. Here, we develop solidstate sources of highly efficient, pure and indistinguishable single photons, and 3D integration of ultra-low-loss optical circuits. We perform an experiment with 20 single photons fed into a 60-mode interferometer, and, in its output, sample over Hilbert spaces with a size of 10 14 -over ten orders of magnitude larger than all previous experiments. The results are validated against distinguishable samplers and uniform samplers with a confidence level of 99.9%.
This review highlights recent advances of MXenes and their composites in the environment-related applications including catalysis, water purification and sensors.
Graphene has intrigued the science community by many unique properties not found in conventional materials. In particular, it is the strongest two-dimensional material ever measured, being able to sustain reversible tensile elastic strain larger than 20%, which yields an interesting possibility to tune the properties of graphene by strain and thus opens a new field called "straintronics". In this article, the current progress in the strain engineering of graphene is reviewed. We first summarize the strain effects on the electronic structure and Raman spectra of graphene. We then highlight the electron-phonon coupling greatly enhanced by the biaxial strain and the strong pseudomagnetic field induced by the non-uniform strain with specific distribution. Finally, the potential application of strain-engineering in the self-assembly of foreign atoms on the graphene surface is also discussed. Given the short history of graphene straintronics research, the current progress has been notable, and many further advances in this field are expected.
An optimal single-photon source should deterministically deliver one and only one photon at a time, with no trade-off between the source's efficiency and the photon indistinguishability. However, all reported solid-state sources of indistinguishable single photons had to rely on polarization filtering which reduced the efficiency by 50%, which fundamentally limited the scaling of photonic quantum technologies. Here, we overcome this final long-standing challenge by coherently driving quantum dots deterministically coupled to polarization-selective Purcell microcavities-two examples are narrowband, elliptical micropillars and broadband, elliptical Bragg gratings. A polarization-orthogonal excitation-collection scheme is designed to minimize the polarization-filtering loss under resonant excitation. We demonstrate a polarized single-photon efficiency of 0.60(2), a single-photon purity of 0.991(3), and an indistinguishability of 0.973(5). Our work provides promising solutions for truly optimal single-photon sources combining near-unity indistinguishability and near-unity system efficiency simultaneously.Single photons are appealing candidates for quantum communications 1,2 , quantumenhanced metrology 3,4 and quantum computing 5,6 . In view of the quantum information applications, the single photons are required to be controllably prepared with a high efficiency into a given quantum state. Specifically, the single photons should possess the same polarization, spatial mode, and transform-limited spectro-temporal profile for a high-visibility Hong-Ou-Mandel-type quantum interference 1,7 .Self-assembled quantum dots show so far the highest quantum efficiency among solid-state quantum emitters and thus can potentially serve as an ideal single-photon source 8-15 . There has been encouraging progress in recent years in developing highperformance single-photon sources 11 . Pulsed resonant excitation on single quantum dots has been developed to eliminate dephasing and time jitter, which created single photons with near-unity indistinguishability 15 . Further, by combining the resonant excitation with Purcell-enhanced micropillar 16,17 or photonic crystals 18,19 , the generated transform-limited 20,21 single photons have been efficiently extracted out of the bulk and funneled into a single mode at far field. Despite the recent progress 16-22 , the experimentally achieved polarized-single-photon efficiency (defined as the number of single-polarized photons extracted from the bulk semiconductor and collected by the first lens per pumping pulse) is ~33% in ref. 16 and ~15% in ref. 17, still fell short of the minimally required efficiency of 50% for boson sampling to show computational advantage to classical algorithms 23 , and was below the efficiency threshold of 67% for photon-loss-tolerant encoding in cluster-state models of optical quantum computing 24 . It should be noted that a <50% single-photon efficiency would render nearly all linear optical quantum computing schemes 1,5 not scalable.The indistinguishable single-photon...
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