I. L. Egusquiza
University of the Basque Country
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Publication
Featured researches published by I. L. Egusquiza.
Physical Review Letters | 2013
A. del Campo; I. L. Egusquiza; Martin B. Plenio; Susana F. Huelga
Bounds to the speed of evolution of a quantum system are of fundamental interest in quantum metrology, quantum chemical dynamics, and quantum computation. We derive a time-energy uncertainty relation for open quantum systems undergoing a general, completely positive, and trace preserving evolution which provides a bound to the quantum speed limit. When the evolution is of the Lindblad form, the bound is analogous to the Mandelstam-Tamm relation which applies in the unitary case, with the role of the Hamiltonian being played by the adjoint of the generator of the dynamical semigroup. The utility of the new bound is exemplified in different scenarios, ranging from the estimation of the passage time to the determination of precision limits for quantum metrology in the presence of dephasing noise.
Physical Review A | 1999
I. L. Egusquiza; J. G. Muga
We reappraise and clarify the contradictory statements found in the literature concerning the time-of-arrival operator introduced by Aharonov and Bohm in Phys. Rev. 122, 1649 (1961). We use Naimarks dilation theorem to reproduce the generalized decomposition of unity (or positive-operator-valued measures) from any self-adjoint extension of the operator, emphasizing a natural one, which arises from the analogy with the momentum operator on the half-line. General time operators are set within a unifying perspective. It is shown that they are not in general related to the time of arrival, even though they may have the same form.
Physical Review Letters | 2011
J. Casanova; Lucas Lamata; I. L. Egusquiza; R. Gerritsma; Christian F. Roos; Juan José García-Ripoll; E. Solano
We propose the quantum simulation of fermion and antifermion field modes interacting via a bosonic field mode, and present a possible implementation with two trapped ions. This quantum platform allows for the scalable add up of bosonic and fermionic modes, and represents an avenue towards quantum simulations of quantum field theories in perturbative and nonperturbative regimes.
Physical Review D | 2011
J. Casanova; Carlos Sabín; Juan León; I. L. Egusquiza; R. Gerritsma; Christian F. Roos; Juan José García-Ripoll; E. Solano
A quantum simulator is a device engineered to reproduce the properties of an ideal quantum model. It allows the study of quantum systems that cannot be efficiently simulated on classical computers. While a universal quantum computer is also a quantum simulator, only particular systems have been simulated up to now. Still, there is a wealth of successful cases, such as spin models, quantum chemistry, relativistic quantum physics and quantum phase transitions. Here, we show how to design a quantum simulator for the Majorana equation, a non-Hamiltonian relativistic wave equation that might describe neutrinos and other exotic particles beyond the standard model. The simulation demands the implementation of charge conjugation, an unphysical operation that opens a new front in quantum simulations, including the discrete symmetries associated with complex conjugation and time reversal. Finally, we show how to implement this general method in trapped ions.
Physical Review Letters | 2017
L. García-Álvarez; I. L. Egusquiza; L. Lamata; A. del Campo; Julian Sonner; E. Solano
We propose the digital quantum simulation of a minimal AdS/CFT model in controllable quantum platforms. We consider the Sachdev-Ye-Kitaev model describing interacting Majorana fermions with randomly distributed all-to-all couplings, encoding nonlocal fermionic operators onto qubits to efficiently implement their dynamics via digital techniques. Moreover, we also give a method for probing nonequilibrium dynamics and the scrambling of information. Finally, our approach serves as a protocol for reproducing a simplified low-dimensional model of quantum gravity in advanced quantum platforms as trapped ions and superconducting circuits.
Physical Review A | 2002
J. A. Damborenea; I. L. Egusquiza; Gerhard C. Hegerfeldt; J. G. Muga
For a quantum-mechanically spread-out particle we investigate a method for determining its arrival time at a specific location. The procedure is based on the emission of a first photon from a two-level system moving into a laser-illuminated region. The resulting temporal distribution is explicitly calculated for the one-dimensional case and compared with axiomatically proposed expressions. As a main result we show that by means of a deconvolution one obtains the well-known quantum-mechanical probability flux of the particle at the location as a limiting distribution.
Physical Review Letters | 2011
Giuseppe Vitagliano; Philipp Hyllus; I. L. Egusquiza; Geza Toth
We determine the complete set of generalized spin squeezing inequalities, given in terms of the collective angular momentum components, for particles with an arbitrary spin. They can be used for the experimental detection of entanglement in an ensemble in which the particles cannot be individually addressed. We also present a large set of criteria involving collective observables different from the angular momentum coordinates. We show that some of the inequalities can be used to detect k-particle entanglement and bound entanglement.
Physical Review Letters | 2015
L. García-Álvarez; J. Casanova; A. Mezzacapo; I. L. Egusquiza; Lucas Lamata; G. Romero; E. Solano
We propose an analog-digital quantum simulation of fermion-fermion scattering mediated by a continuum of bosonic modes within a circuit quantum electrodynamics scenario. This quantum technology naturally provides strong coupling of superconducting qubits with a continuum of electromagnetic modes in an open transmission line. In this way, we propose qubits to efficiently simulate fermionic modes via digital techniques, while we consider the continuum complexity of an open transmission line to simulate the continuum complexity of bosonic modes in quantum field theories. Therefore, we believe that the complexity-simulating-complexity concept should become a leading paradigm in any effort towards scalable quantum simulations.
Physical Review A | 2005
Eric A. Galapon; F. Delgado; J. Gonzalo Muga; I. L. Egusquiza
We show that the Kijowski distribution for time of arrivals in the entire real line is the limiting distribution of the time-of-arrival distribution in a confining box as its length increases to infinity. The dynamics of the confined time-of-arrival eigenfunctions is also numerically investigated and demonstrated that the eigenfunctions evolve to have point supports at the arrival point at their respective eigenvalues in the limit of arbitrarily large confining lengths, giving insight into the ideal physical content of the Kijowsky distribution.
Physical Review A | 2014
Giuseppe Vitagliano; Iagoba Apellaniz; I. L. Egusquiza; Geza Toth
A complete set of generalized spin-squeezing inequalities is derived for an ensemble of particles with an arbitrary spin. Our conditions are formulated with the first and second moments of the collective angular momentum coordinates. A method for mapping the spin-squeezing inequalities for spin-