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Date: Mon, 23 Dec 2002 11:16:47 -0500
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Physics News Update 618

PHYSICS NEWS UPDATE
The American Institute of Physics Bulletin of Physics News
Number 618 December 23, 2002   by Phillip F. Schewe, Ben Stein, and James
Riordon

TUNING CARBON  NANOTUBE RESONANCE FREQUENCIES can be achieved by varying a
[SSZ: Text deleted]

QUANTUM SIMULATIONS WITH CONTINUOUS VARIABLES.  Furthering efforts to
answer hard-to-test questions about the quantum world, a NIST ion-trap
computer can now simulate how the unique rules of quantum mechanics can
affect a microscopic particle's "continuous variables," quantities such as
position and momentum which can have a smooth continuum of values.  Acting
as a form of quantum computer, the NIST ion trap might only need a couple of
seconds to simulate a quantum physics experiment that can take days to carry
out.  Moreover, the ion trap can simulate experiments that require rare
commodities, like entangled photons, which are created relatively
infrequently.
Since quantum computers embrace the unusual logic of the microscopic world,
they can perform powerful simulations of its often counterintuitive
phenomena.  First envisioned by Richard Feynman, quantum simulators are
perhaps the earliest practical application of quantum computing--in fact,
they have been around for several years now.  However, previous versions
(Update 438, http://www.aip.org/enews/physnews/1999/split/pnu438-2.htm )
have only re-created quantum phenomena involving "discrete variables," such
as an electron's energy in an atom, which can only have certain prescribed
values.   The new version recreates quantum processes involving both
discrete and continuous variables.
To construct their simulator, NIST researchers in Colorado trap a single
beryllium-9 ion with electric fields.  As the ion vibrates in the trap, its
position and momentum are continuous.  This allows the researchers to easily
simulate any other complementary pair of continuous variables-such as an
electric field's amplitude and phase-which have the exact same mathematical
interrelationship.  To perform simulations, the researchers shine a series
of carefully engineered light pulses on the ion.  The pulses cause the ion
to act like something it's not, such as an electron bound by an atom, or
even a photon as it hits a beamsplitter.  Under the influence of the pulses,
the ion's quantum states evolve in a way identical to the situation the
researchers want to study.
For now, the researchers have performed simple, proof-of-principle
demonstrations.  As an example, they have investigated how a photon would
behave if entangled with other photons by sending it through a beamsplitter.
Shining light pulses on the ion to simulate the effects of a beamsplitter on
a photon, the researchers have demonstrated that interferometry with up to
three other entangled photons would be three times as precise as
interferometers using single photons, in line with the recent experimental
results on bi-photon interferometry (Update 613,
http://www.aip.org/enews/physnews/2002/split/613-1.html ).  (Leibfried et
al, Physical Review Letters, 9 December 2002; Dietrich Leibfried,
303-497-7880, [EMAIL PROTECTED])

PRL CHANGES ITS PUBLICATION DATES.  Instead of appearing on Monday each
week, the print version of Physical Review Letters will now appear on
Friday.  The print issue will comprise all the articles that were published
online during that week.  It had already been the case for more than a year
that online publication marked the official publication date for each
article, and so the new print-version schedule does not affect this policy.
(http://prl.aps.org/edannounce/PRLv89i26.html )

***********
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