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Related Concept Videos

Standing Waves in a Cavity01:28

Standing Waves in a Cavity

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A household microwave and lasers are examples of standing electromagnetic waves in a cavity. When two conducting metal plates are placed parallel at the nodal planes, it creates a cavity where standing waves are formed. The cavity between the two planes is analogous to a stretched string held at the points x = 0 and x = L. Here, the distance 'L' between the two planes must be an integer multiple of half of the wavelength. The wavelengths that satisfy this condition are given by:
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A parallel-plate capacitor with capacitance C, whose plates have area A and separation distance d, is connected to a resistor R and a battery of voltage V. The current starts to flow at t = 0. What is the displacement current between the capacitor plates at time t? From the properties of the capacitor, what is the corresponding real current?
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In the absence of an external magnetic field, nuclear spin states are degenerate and randomly oriented. When a magnetic field is applied, the spins begin to precess and orient themselves along (lower energy) or against (higher energy) the direction of the field. At equilibrium, a slight excess population of spins exists in the lower energy state. Because the direction of the magnetic field is fixed as the z-axis,  the precessing magnetic moments are randomly oriented around the z-axis.
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Gradient Echo Quantum Memory in Warm Atomic Vapor
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Microwave signal processing using an analog quantum reservoir computer.

Alen Senanian1,2, Sridhar Prabhu3,4, Vladimir Kremenetski4

  • 1Department of Physics, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, USA. As3656@cornell.edu.

Nature Communications
|August 30, 2024
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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Quantum reservoir computing (QRC) uses quantum processors for machine learning. This study demonstrates analog QRC with superconducting circuits for accurate microwave signal classification.

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Area of Science:

  • Quantum computing
  • Machine learning
  • Superconducting circuits

Background:

  • Quantum reservoir computing (QRC) offers a machine learning paradigm avoiding barren plateaus.
  • Existing QRC implementations use discretized signals, unlike analog quantum systems.
  • Superconducting circuits are suitable for processing analog microwave signals.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To demonstrate an analog quantum reservoir using a superconducting circuit.
  • To classify analog-continuous microwave signals using quantum reservoir computing.
  • To process ultra-low-power microwave signals for potential quantum sensing advantages.

Main Methods:

  • Utilized a quantum superconducting circuit with a coupled oscillator and qubit as the quantum reservoir.
  • Applied the analog quantum reservoir to various microwave signal classification tasks.
  • Processed ultra-low-power analog-continuous microwave signals.

Main Results:

  • Achieved high accuracy across all demonstrated microwave signal classification tasks.
  • Successfully implemented analog quantum reservoir computing using superconducting circuits.
  • Showcased the processing of ultra-low-power microwave signals.

Conclusions:

  • An analog quantum reservoir based on superconducting circuits can effectively classify microwave signals.
  • This approach overcomes the limitations of discretized signal processing in current QRC.
  • Paves the way for quantum sensing-computational advantages in microwave signal processing.