ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
Velleytronics as a new electronic conception is an emerging exciting research field with wide potential applications, which is attracting great research interests for their extraordinary properties. The localized electronic spins by optical generation of valley polarization with spin-like quantum numbers are promising candidates for implementing quantum-information processing in solids. It is expected that a single qubit preparation can be realized optically by using combination of left- and right-circularly polarized lights. Significantly in a series of experiments, this has already been well achieved by linearly polarized laser representing equal weights of left- and right-circular components resulting in formation of a valley exciton as a specific pseudo-spin qubit with equal amplitudes for spin up and spin down. Further researches on the control of valley pseudospin using longitudinal magnetic field and optical Stark effect have been reported. However, a general qubit preparation has not yet been demonstrated. Moreover as a platform for quantum information processing, the precise readout of a qubit state is necessary, for which the state tomography is a standard method in obtaining all information of a qubit state density matrix.
Monolayers of semiconducting transition metal dichalcogenides are two-dimensional direct-gap systems which host tightly-bound excitons with an internal degree of freedom corresponding to the valley of the constituting carriers. Strong spin-orbit inte
The Hall effect can be extended by inducing a temperature gradient in lieu of electric field that is known as the Nernst (-Ettingshausen) effect. The recently discovered spin Nernst effect in heavy metals continues to enrich the picture of Nernst eff
Semiconducting transition metal dichalcogenide monolayers have emerged as promising candidates for future valleytronics-based quantum information technologies. Two distinct momentum-states of tightly-bound electron-hole pairs in these materials can b
Full quantum state tomography is used to characterize the state of an ensemble based qubit implemented through two hyperfine levels in Pr3+ ions, doped into a Y2SiO5 crystal. We experimentally verify that single-qubit rotation errors due to inhomogen
Decoherence largely limits the physical realization of qubits and its mitigation is critical to quantum science. Here, we construct a robust qubit embedded in a decoherence-protected subspace, obtained by hybridizing an applied microwave drive with t