PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Engineering dual carriageways for signals

New possibilities for controlling signal routing in quantum information processing

2023-07-13
(Press-News.org) Routing signals and isolating them against noise and back-reflections are essential in many practical situations in classical communication as well as in quantum processing. In a theory-experimental collaboration, a team led by Andreas Nunnenkamp from the University of Vienna and Ewold Verhagen based at the research institute AMOLF in Amsterdam has achieved unidirectional transport of signals in pairs of "one-way streets". This research published in Nature Physics opens up new possibilities for more flexible signaling devices.

Devices that allow to route signals, for example carried by light or sound waves, are essential in many practical situations. This is, for instance, the case in quantum information processing, where the states of the quantum computer have to be amplified to read them out - without noise from the amplification process corrupting them. That is why devices that allow signals to travel in a one-way channel e.g. isolators or circulators are much sought-after. However, at present such devices are lossy, bulky, and require large magnetic fields that break time-reversal symmetry to achieve unidirectional behaviour. These limitations have prompted strong efforts to find alternatives that take less space and that do not rely on magnetic fields. 

The new study published in Nature Physics introduces a new class of systems characterized by a phenomenon the authors call "quadrature nonreciprocity". Quadrature nonreciprocity exploits interference between two distinct physical processes. Each of the processes produces a wave that contributes to the transmitted signal. Like water waves produced by two thrown pebbles, the two waves can either cancel or amplify each other, in a phenomenon known as interference.

This allows for unidirectional transmission of signals without time-reversal breaking and leads to a distinctive dependence on the phase, i.e., the quadrature, of the signal. "In these devices, transmission depends not only on the direction of the signal, but also on the signal quadrature" says Clara Wanjura, the theoretical lead author of the study. "This realizes a ‘dual carriageway’ for signals: one quadrature is transmitted in one direction and the other quadrature in the opposite direction. Time-reversal symmetry then enforces that the quadratures always travel pairwise along opposite directions in two separate lanes."

The experimental team at AMOLF has demonstrated this phenomenon experimentally in a nanomechanical system where interactions among mechanical vibrations of small silicon strings are orchestrated by laser light. Laser light exerts forces on the strings, thereby mediating interactions between their different vibration ‘tones’. Jesse Slim, the experimental lead author of the study says: "We have developed a versatile experimental toolbox that allowed us to control the two different types of interactions that are needed to implement quadrature nonreciprocity. This way we could reveal the resulting unidirectional transport of the signals experimentally."

The work opens up new possibilities for signal routing and quantum-limited amplification, with potential applications in quantum information processing and sensing.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

In historic procedure, donor liver protects heart transplant

In historic procedure, donor liver protects heart transplant
2023-07-13
Doctors in Seattle are reporting a history-making case in which a patient received two donor organs, a liver and a heart, to prevent the extreme likelihood that her body would reject a donor heart transplanted alone. In this innovative case, the organ recipient’s own healthy liver was transplanted, domino-like, into a second patient who had advanced liver disease. The dual-organ recipient, Adriana Rodriguez, 31, of Bellingham, Washington, has recovered well since the Jan. 14, 2023, procedures, said Dr. Shin Lin, a cardiologist ...

Red pill or blue pill? The critical decision to control the superbugs

2023-07-13
Researchers from Tokyo Medical and Dental University (TMDU) investigate a pharmacist-led intervention to optimize the oral antimicrobial prescriptions in dental setting Tokyo, Japan - The battle to stop the increase of superbugs in hospitals has been an ongoing struggle for healthcare professionals. Dentists are currently facing a medical challenge that determines the faith of antimicrobial resistance in healthcare settings. To choose the “red pill” means to embrace the painful truth that bacteria are acquiring resistance to many antimicrobials. Meanwhile, the “blue pill” creates ...

The economic life of cells

The economic life of cells
2023-07-13
A team from the University of Tokyo has combined economic theory with biology to understand how natural systems respond to change. The researchers noticed a similarity between consumers’ shopping behavior and the behavior of metabolic systems, which convert food into energy in our bodies. The team focused on predicting how different metabolic systems might respond to environmental change by using an economic tool called the Slutsky equation. Their calculations indicated that very different metabolic ...

Researchers propose strategy for improving NASICON-type cathode performance

Researchers propose strategy for improving NASICON-type cathode performance
2023-07-13
Manganese-rich NASICON-type materials have attracted widespread attention for developing advanced polyanionic cathodes, primarily driven by their abundant reserves, promising cycling performance, and potentially high operating voltage. Unfortunately, their charge/discharge profiles exhibit significant voltage hysteresis, which leads to a limited reversible capacity, thereby preventing their application. Now, however, the situation may be changing due to research by scientists at the Institute of Process Engineering (IPE) and the Institute of Physics of the Chinese Academy of Sciences. They recently identified ...

Drexel’s titanium oxide material lets sunlight drive green hydrogen production

Drexel’s titanium oxide material lets sunlight drive green hydrogen production
2023-07-13
Clean energy plans, including the U.S. Infrastructure Investment Act’s “Clean Hydrogen Road Map,” are counting on hydrogen as a fuel of the future. But current hydrogen separation technology is still falling short of efficiency and sustainability goals. As part of ongoing efforts to develop materials that could enable alternative energy sources, researchers in Drexel University’s College of Engineering have produced a titanium oxide nanofilament material that can harness sunlight to unlock the ubiquitous molecule’s potential as a fuel source. The discovery offers an alternative ...

Advancing causal inference in clinical neuroscience research: a call for clarity

Advancing causal inference in clinical neuroscience research: a call for clarity
2023-07-13
A Perspective published in Volume 3 of the journal Psychoradiology, researchers from Shanghai Jiao Tong University confronted these challenges and advocates for more clarity and transparency in causal analyses. The review distinguishes between traditional statistical analysis and causal inference, highlighting the need for specific causal assumptions, like the Stable Unit Treatment Value Assumption (SUTVA). Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) are considered the gold standard for estimating causal effects. The authors stress the importance of imitating RCTs in observational studies through quasi-experimental techniques, ...

Longevity biotech startup Gero demonstrates the power of quantum computing in drug design

Longevity biotech startup Gero demonstrates the power of quantum computing in drug design
2023-07-13
Gero, an AI-driven biotech focused on aging and longevity, has demonstrated the feasibility of applying quantum computing for drug design and generative chemistry, which now offers significant promise for the future of healthcare. The research, published in Scientific Reports, outlines how a hybrid quantum-classical machine-learning model was used to interface between classical and quantum computational devices with the goal of generating novel chemical structures for potential drugs — an industry first.   The research paper follows ...

Timing of turkey nesting may not shift with changing climate

2023-07-13
A new study suggests eastern wild turkeys in five southern U.S. states are unlikely to make meaningful changes in the timing of when they begin nesting, even under significant future climate change. The findings suggest eastern wild turkeys (Meleagris gallopavo silvestris) could be vulnerable to shifts in climate, which could threaten the availability of their food sources, the amount of vegetation cover available to protect them from predators, and other factors. “There are implications here for turkey populations ...

New toxin facilitates disease infection and spread in wheat

New toxin facilitates disease infection and spread in wheat
2023-07-13
Although wheat was among the first domesticated food crops, it remains a global dietary staple several millennia later. Grown on every continent except Antarctica, wheat is the second highest produced grain worldwide, with nearly 800,000 metric tons grown each year (Food and Agriculture Organization). However, a fungal pathogen named Fusarium graminearum causes the devastating disease Fusarium head blight (FHB) on wheat and contaminates grains with harmful toxins called trichothecenes. One such trichothecene, called deoxynivalenol (DON), is produced by most F. graminearum strains in the United States, and it is an essential virulence factor that increases the pathogen’s spread ...

FAU receives $11.5 million gift to combat life-threating illness, amyloidosis

FAU receives $11.5 million gift to combat life-threating illness, amyloidosis
2023-07-13
Currently, there is no cure for amyloidosis, a life-threatening disease that can be present throughout the body, including the heart, kidneys, liver and brain. The most common localized form of amyloidosis, which is seen significantly more often, is in the brain. Cerebral amyloidosis, when symptomatic, usually manifests in one of two ways: in Alzheimer’s disease and related dementias and in brain bleeds, which have consequences such as a stroke. Because amyloidosis does not affect a specific organ, unraveling the underlying cause of amyloid fibril creation – a hallmark ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Mpox clinical presentation, diagnostic approaches, and treatment strategies

Trends in oral and injectable HIV preexposure prophylaxis prescriptions in the US

Information about sexual and gender minority services and policies on US hospital websites

Study finds use of naloxone by Good Samaritans is up, but not nearly enough

Risk of suicidal ideation or attempts in adolescents with obesity treated with GLP1 receptor agonists

SARS-CoV-2 infection and new-onset type 2 diabetes among pediatric patients

Recovery from COVID-19–related disruptions in cancer detection

Smaller vial size for Alzheimer’s drug could save Medicare hundreds of millions per year

Human temporal resolution of odor is shorter than thought: Study

Scientists discover unexpected link between genes involved in human brain evolution and developmental disorders

Ancient 3D paper art, kirigami, could shape modern wireless technology

Integrating machine learning with statistical methods enhances disease risk prediction models

Changing watering practices to improve tomato plant health

Six proteins implicated in early-onset preeclampsia

Researchers at The University of Texas at San Antonio reveal oversight in AI image recognition tools

World of crayfish™: A web platform for global mapping of freshwater crayfish and pathogens

How to make biodiversity credits work: science-based solutions for real conservation gains

Qunova becomes first to achieve ‘chemical accuracy’ on commercial quantum computers with its hardware agnostic algorithm

Scientists have successfully bred corals to improve their heat tolerance

Adaptability of trees persists after millions of years of climate change

Protein involved in balancing DNA replication and restarting found

How liberals and conservatives can have better conversations, according to a psychologist

Survey finds 25% of adults suspect they have undiagnosed ADHD

Let there be light: Bright future for solar panels, TV screens and more

Innovative nanoparticle therapy targets fat absorption to combat obesity

Novel procedure combined with semaglutide may eliminate insulin dependency in type 2 diabetes

Three key signs of major trauma could speed up treatment of severely injured children brought to emergency departments by carers not ambulances

Climate change is a health emergency too

Chronic stress accelerates colorectal cancer progression by disrupting the balance of gut microbiota, new study shows

Brazilian study identifies potential targets for treatment of visceral leishmaniasis

[Press-News.org] Engineering dual carriageways for signals
New possibilities for controlling signal routing in quantum information processing