School of Physics - Theses

Permanent URI for this collection

Search Results

Now showing 1 - 10 of 136
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    Quantum technology for 3D imaging of single molecules
    Perunicic, Viktor ( 2018)
    Biochemical processes are conducted by interactions of individual molecules that comprise cells. It is the transient physical shape of proteins that dictates their specific functionality. However, imaging individual instances of single molecular structures is one of the notable challenges in structural biology. Presently available protein structure reconstruction techniques, Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) spectroscopy, X-ray crystallography and cryogenic Electron microscopy (cryo-EM), cannot provide images of individual molecules. Despite their power and their complementary capabilities, said techniques produce only average molecular information. They achieve this by sampling large ensembles of molecules in nearly identical conformational states. As a result, individual instances of a generic, inhomogeneous or unstable atomic structures presently remain beyond reach. We seek to address this problem in a novel way by leveraging quantum technologies. In quantum computing, qubits are usually arranged in grids and coupled to one another in a highly organised manner. However, what if a qubit was coupled to an organic cluster of nuclear spins instead, e.g. that of a single molecule? What can be done with such a system in the context of quantum control and 3D imaging of individual molecular systems? What are its ultimate limits and possibilities? We explore those questions in stages throughout the chapters of this thesis. We begin in Chapter 2 by investigating dipole-dipole interactions present between the nuclear spins in a target molecule, on one side, and between an electron-spin based qubit and each of the nuclear target spins on the other. We consider the Nitrogen Vacancy (NV) centre in diamond as an example of a suitable qubit with an active community interest as a biocompatible nano-magnetometer. Our intention is to lay down foundations that will help us advance from magnetometry to 3D molecular imaging. Our inspiration comes from drawing parallels between the single molecule sensing in the qubit-target system and the clinical Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI). An MRI machine directly images a single, specific sample in its native state regardless of its characteristics. That is precisely what we would like to achieve on the molecular level. In Chapter 3, we develop a framework that allows a spin qubit to serve as a platform for 3D atomic imaging of molecules with Angstrom resolution. It uses an electron spin qubit simultaneously as a detector and as a gradient field provider for MRI-style imaging. We develop a theoretical quantum control methodology that allows dipole-dipole decoupling sequences used in solid-state NMR to be interleaved with the gradient field provided by the qubit. In Chapter 4, we propose group-V donors in silicon as a novel qubit platform for bioimaging. Actively researched for quantum computing purposes, such qubits have not been considered in the biological context. A prime example of this class of qubits is the phosphorus donor in silicon (Si:P). We show how its specific set of properties, including long coherence times, large wave function and low operational temperatures can be leveraged for the purposes of atomic level imaging. Finalising the work in Chapter 5, we simulate the imaging process for one transmembrane protein of the influenza virus embedded in a lipid membrane. This demonstration highlights the potential of silicon spin qubits in the future development of in situ single molecule imaging at sub-Angstrom resolution.
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    Matrix product states in quantum information processing
    Duan, Aochen ( 2015)
    We employ the newly developed Matrix Product State (MPS) formalism to simulate two problems in the context of quantum information processing. One is the Boson sampling problem, the other is the ground state energy density of an n-qubit Hamiltonian. We find that the MPS representation of the Boson sampling problem is inefficient due to large entan- glement as the number of photons increases. In the context of adiabatic quantum computing (AQC), MPS is used to find the first four moments of an n-qubit Hamiltonian to approximate the ground state energy density of the Hamiltonian. We show an advantage of using the first-four-moment method over the conventional adiabatic procedure. Future work around AQC using MPS is discussed.
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    Astigmatic phase retrieval of lightfields with helical wavefronts
    Henderson, Clare Anne ( 2012)
    The controlled use of coherent radiation has led to the development of a wide range of imaging methods in which aspects of the phase are enhanced through diffraction and propagation. A mathematical description of the propagation of light allows us to determine the properties of an optical wavefield in any plane. When a sample is illuminated with coherent planar illumination and its diffracted wavefield is recorded in the far-field of propagation, a direct inverse calculation of the phase can be quickly performed through computational means – the fast Fourier transform. Algorithmic processing is required, however, because only the intensity of the diffracted wavefield can be recorded. To determine structural information about the sample, some other information must be known about the experimental system. What is known, and how it is processed computationally, has led to the development and successful application of a broad spectrum of phase reconstruction iterative algorithms. Vortices in lightfields have a helical structure to their wavefront, at the core of which exists, necessarily, a screw-discontinuity to their phase. They have a characteristic intensity distribution comprising a radially symmetric bright ring around a dark core which, for either handedness of the rotation of the vortex, appears identical. Observation of a vortex is, therefore, ambiguous in its ability to determine its true direction of rotation. The ubiquitous presence of vortices in all lightfields hinder the success of phase reconstruction methods based on planar illumination and, if successful, render any reconstruction of the phase non-unique, due to the ambiguity associated to their helicity. The presence of a controlled spherical phase distortion can break the symmetry of the appearance of the vortices and, hence, remove the ambiguity from the system and drive algorithms to a solution. For the pathological case of an on-axis vortex, however, spherical distortion will not break the radial symmetry. The astigmatic phase retrieval method separates the spherical distortion into cylindrical distortion in two orthogonal directions. This form of phase distortion breaks the symmetry of a vortex allowing a unique determination of the phase. The incorporation of such use of cylindrical distortion into an iterative phase reconstruction algorithm forms the basis for the astigmatic phase retrieval (APR) method. Presented in this thesis is the creation and propagation of lightfields with helical wavefronts, produced through simulation and experiment. Observation of the effects of cylindrical distortion on vortices is explored in detail, particularly for split high-charge vortices where their positions can inform the type and strength of the applied phase distortion. Experimentally, onaxis vortices are created and distorted for the purposes of astigmatic phase retrieval in both visible light and X-ray wavefields. This thesis presents the first experimental demonstration of the astigmatic phase retrieval (APR) method, successfully applied optically with a simple test sample. The method is also applied to lightfields with helical wavefronts. The successful unambiguous reconstruction of on-axis chargeone and charge-two visible light vortices are presented, which is the first experimental demonstration on the unique phase reconstruction of an on-axis vortex from intensity measurements alone. Experiments are then performed to apply the method to vortices created in X-ray wavefields. The parameters of the experiment and the data have not, however, allowed for a successful reconstruction in this case. It is demonstrated through extensive simulation analysis that the APR method is a fast and robust imaging method. It is also shown that, through observation of the error metric, experimental parameters can be corrected or even determined, making the method successful even if there is no a priori knowledge of the experimental system. The application of the APR method as a general imaging technique for use in high-resolution X-ray diffraction experiments is, therefore, is a logical extension of the work of this thesis.
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    Practical Aspects of the Preparation of NV Centers In Diamond for Quantum Applications and Magnetometry
    Genish, Hadar ( 2018)
    This thesis present the result of four experimental projects, that revolve around the practical aspects of using NV centers for quantum applications. The core of the this work deals with the coherence time of NV centers and how it is affected by damage introduced into the diamond lattice by ion implantation where we have discovered that while the emission of the NV center is sensitive to the damage the coherence time is not. The other topics of this work cover a novel method to deposit isolated nano diamond using aerosols and a method to secure the nano diamonds into silicon substrates using self-assembled mono layers. Finally, the work concludes with a proposal to use the magnetic field produced by spin vortices to increase the coherence time of NV centers where some preliminary result of the spin vortices fabrication are presented.
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    Distributed Matrix Product State Simulations of Large-Scale Quantum Circuits
    Dang, Aidan ( 2017)
    Before large-scale, robust quantum computers are developed, it is valuable to be able to classically simulate quantum algorithms to study their properties. To do so, we developed a numerical library for simulating quantum circuits via the matrix product state formalism on distributed memory architectures. By examining the multipartite entanglement present across Shor’s algorithm, we were able to effectively map a high-level circuit of Shor’s algorithm to the one-dimensional structure of a matrix product state, enabling us to perform a simulation of a specific 60 qubit instance in approximately 14 TB of memory: potentially the largest non-trivial quantum circuit simulation ever performed. We then applied matrix product state and matrix product density operator techniques to simulating one-dimensional circuits from Google’s quantum supremacy problem with errors and found it mostly resistant to our methods.
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    Measurement of Direct CP Asymmetry and Branching Fraction in B0→D0𝜋0 and B+→D0𝜋+ at the Belle Experiment
    Bloomfield, Tristan Joel ( 2019)
    This thesis describes the measurement of direct CP asymmetry and branching fraction for the hadronic B decays B0 -> D0 pi0 an B+ -> D0 pi+. The study uses the full dataset of 711 fb^(-1) collected at the Y(4S) resonance by the Belle experiment at the KEKB accelerator in Tsukuba, Japan. Event reconstruction, background suppression and modelling are first studied using Monte Carlo simulations, before yield and direct CP asymmetry are extracted in a three-dimensional unbinned extended maximum likelihood fit. B+ -> D0 pi+ is measured first as the control mode to validate the methodology, before same techniques are used on B0 -> D0 pi0 . The measured branching fractions and direct CP asymmetries are: Br(B0 -> D0 pi0) = (2.69 +/- 0.06 +/- 0.09) x 10^(-4), A_CP(B0 -> D0 pi0) = (0.10 +/- 2.05 +/- 1.29) x 10^(-2), Br(B+ -> D0 pi+) = (4.53 +/- 0.02 +/- 0.14) x 10^(-3), A_CP(B+ -> D0 pi+) = (0.19 +/- 0.36 +/- 0.60) x 10^(-2), for B0 -> D0 pi0 and B+ -> D0 pi+ respectively, where the first uncertainty is statistical and the second is systematic. The represents the world’s first measurement of direct CP asymmetry for B0 -> D0 pi0. This measurement of branching fraction of B0 -> D0 pi0 and B+ -> D0 pi+, and direct CP asymmetry of B+ -> D0 pi+ are the most precise to date, and consistent with the current world average values.
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    Weighing the Giants: Measuring galaxy cluster masses with CMB lensing
    Patil, Sanjaykumar ( 2019)
    Galaxy clusters are powerful probes of cosmology. Their abundance depends on the rate of structure growth and the expansion rate of the universe, making the density of clusters highly sensitive to dark energy. Galaxy clusters additionally provide powerful constraints on matter density, matter fluctuation amplitude, and the sum of neutrino masses. However, cluster cosmology is currently limited by systematic uncertainties in the cluster mass estimation. Generally, the cluster masses are estimated using observable-mass scaling relations where the observable can be optical richness, X-ray temperature etc. The observable-mass scaling relation depends on the complex cluster baryonic physics which is not well understood and any deviation in the baryonic physics will lead to uncertainties in the mass estimation. On the other hand, gravitational lensing offers one of the most promising techniques to measure cluster mass as it directly probes the total matter content of the cluster. Gravitational lensing can additionally be used to calibrate the observable-mass scaling relations. The gravitational lensing source can either be optical galaxies or the cosmic microwave background (CMB). My thesis focuses on developing statistical and mathematical tools to robustly extract the cluster lensing signal from CMB data. We develop a maximum likelihood estimator to optimally extract cluster lensing signal from CMB data. We find that the Stokes QU maps and the traditional EB maps provide similar constraints on mass estimates. We quantify the effect of astrophysical foregrounds on CMB cluster lensing analysis. While the foregrounds set an effective noise floor for temperature estimator, the polarisation estimator is largely unaffected. We use realistic simulations to forecast that CMB cluster lensing is expected to constrain cluster masses to 3-6%(1%) level for upcoming (next generation) CMB experiments. One of the standard ways to extract the CMB-cluster lensing signal is by using the quadratic estimator. The thermal Sunyaev-Zel'dovich effect (tSZ) acts as a major contaminant in quadratic estimator and induces significant systematic and statistical uncertainty. We develop modified quadratic estimator to eliminate the tSZ bias and to significantly reduce the tSZ statistical uncertainty. Using our modified quadratic estimator we constrain the mass of Dark Energy Survey year-3 cluster catalog. We also put constraints on the normalisation parameter of optical richness-mass scaling relation. In addition to removing the tSZ bias, modified quadratic estimator also reduces tSZ induced statistical uncertainty by 40% in future low noise CMB-surveys.
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    Quantum hyperpolarisation of nuclear spins and multi-modal microscopic imaging with diamond defect spins
    Broadway, David Aaron ( 2019)
    Quantum technologies promise to impact on several aspects of society. Examples include quantum computing to perform certain calculations significantly faster than current classical computers, quantum cryptography for more secure communications, quantum sensing to make measurements with unprecedented sensitivity and resolution, and specialised quantum devices such as quantum hyperpolarisers for enhanced medical imaging. However, the field is still in its infancy and most quantum technologies have been realised only in delicate laboratory settings with little prospect for real-world applications (e.g. quantum sensors), or are many years away from being mature enough to make an impact (quantum computing). This thesis develops two applications of quantum technologies, in the direction of quantum hyperpolarisation on the one hand and quantum sensing on the other hand, which utilise a quantum system particularly suited for practical applications, the nitrogen-vacancy (NV) centre in diamond. This diamond spin defect can be operated in ambient conditions and the resulting quantum devices can be easily miniaturised for large scale deployment. Specifically, in the first part of this thesis (chapters 2 to 4), two new techniques to realise hyperpolarisation (HP) of nuclear spins are developed. Through effective HP, ensembles of nuclear spin can be polarised far beyond the normal Boltzmann level, which can be used to enhance the spin signal for nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and imaging (MRI). Chapter 2 and 3 focus on exploiting direct cross-relaxation (CR) between the NV spin and the nuclear spin. Chapter 2 investigates a CR-based protocol for sensing, and determines, through a study of the NV physics, under what regimes this protocol can be applied to nuclear spin detection. This study constructs a framework under which HP via CR can be realised. Chapter 3 continues in this direction and demonstrate that CR can be used to hyperpolarise external nuclear spins. A detailed understanding of the spin bath mechanics is explored and the impact of rogue uncontrolled NV spins on this spin bath is determined. Additionally, this protocol is compared with other HP techniques and shows a remarkable improvement in polarisation rate, however, it is particularly sensitive to magnetic field detuning. To overcome this issue, in chapter 4 a different technique is developed that relies on a dynamical decoupling protocol purposefully modified to achieve HP. This new technique has a slower polarisation rate than CR-based HP but is robust to the experimental errors that exist in scaling these hyperpolarisation techniques. The second part of this thesis (chapters 5 and 6) exploits the quantum sensing properties of ensembles of NV centres in diamond to develop multi-modal microscopic imaging, which is a promising tool for device diagnosis and the study of mesoscopic phenomena. Specifically, chapter 5 develops and implements a technique for imaging the electric field simultaneously with the magnetic field. The technique is applied to the study of electric fields that are intrinsic to interfaces and junctions. The functionality of electronic devices (such as transistors) are fundamentally dictated by these fields which have traditionally been opaque to probing except at the very surface. While the surface potential is crucial, a wealth of information is contained in the bulk structure which is the focus of this study. In chapter 6 the same sensing protocol is extended to image stress embedded in the diamond rather than electric fields. A series of different deformation sources is used to test and verify that the technique can determine the entire stress tensor with high sensitivity and micrometer spatial resolution. With these new imaging capabilities, extending the traditional magnetic field sensing to electric field and stress, multi-modal NV imaging is a promising example of quantum technology that may have an immediate impact in other fields of science.
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    Bioelectronic systems enabled by wireless electromagnetic power transfer
    Aldaoud, Ammar George ( 2019)
    Wireless biomedical electronic implants are rapidly being developed to treat a variety of medical conditions. Current technologies include the pacemaker to treat arrhythmias, the cochlear implant to overcome hearing impairment and the deep brain stimulator to treat Parkinson’s disease. Researchers are aiming to create implants that are miniaturised, battery-free, and minimally invasive. This is to ensure that devices are simpler to implant, to avoid surgical battery replacement and to minimise the risk of infection. To meet these demands, future biomedical electronic implants need to be miniaturised and capable of wireless power and data transfer. This thesis explores and extends the capabilities of three different wireless power transfer technologies for biomedical electronic implants: inductive, capacitive and radiative power transfer. This thesis adopts a systems approach to extend the capabilities of wireless power transfer systems. Wireless inductive power transfer has received thorough attention in the literature and involves the use of time-varying magnetic fields to transmit power through biological tissue. Typically, inductive power transfer involves a single transmitter and single receiver. This thesis demonstrates many receiving devices can be operated from a single transmitter - without adding complicated electronics to each receiving device. Moreover, by tuning the receiving coil on each device carefully the transmitter can power individual devices, or multiple devices simultaneously, extending the capabilities of inductive power transfer systems. Optogenetics, a technique used to transfect cells to make them light sensitive, is used to provide biological validation of the multichannel inductive receiving topology. Human embryonic kidney cells are transfected to be sensitive to blue light and then a twin channel inductive receiver with a blue and yellow light is modulated to demonstrate a cell response and no cell response respectively. Inductive coupling is not always the most suitable power transfer scheme and wireless capacitive coupling is presented as an alternative. This is where time-varying electric fields transmit power through biological tissue via conductive plates. Stenting, a surgical procedure used to prevent blood vessels from closing, is used to validate the efficacy of capacitive coupling in a biological context. Stents are thin metal tubes resembling chicken wire made from nitinol - a conductive nickel titanium alloy. There is significant motivation to include intelligent sensors in stents as they are simple to implant via angiographic catheter. However, stents preclude the use of batteries as they cannot be removed after surgery so wireless power and data transfer is essential. The optimal frequency to use to transmit power to a stent via capacitive coupling is derived from first principles. Then, a miniaturised circuit board, capable of wireless power and data transmission is fabricated and placed between two stents. The wireless power and data transfer capabilities of the device are validated in-vitro in excised muscle tissue and in-vivo in a live ovine model. The results demonstrate that capacitive power and data transfer is viable for stent-based biomedical implants. An emerging area of study is wireless radiative power transfer through biological tissue. Such a technique is promising for powering miniaturised, deep tissue implants. Due to the dispersive nature of biological tissue, finite element analysis is essential to understanding how wireless radiative power transfer can power biomedical electronic implants efficiently. This thesis builds on efficient radiative power transfer schemes by proposing a new implant and antenna geometry. Long and thin implants show promise as they have the potential to be delivered by catheter or injection - reducing surgical risk and overhead. This thesis demonstrates a technique that uses near-field radiative power transfer to efficiently power a 20 mm long implant that is sub-millimetre in diameter. To power the device, optimised wide dipole transmitting antennas are simulated, designed, fabricated, tested and measured for various implant depths. Biological validation is provided by stimulating retinal ganglion cells wirelessly with the miniaturised device designed to power a small light. In summary, the work presented in this thesis demonstrates that by extending wireless powering schemes from the well known inductive coil to include capacitive and radiative power transfer, implants can be miniaturized and inserted in places in the body that might have not seemed previously possible. Therefore, wireless biomedical electronics implants are likely to become miniaturised, battery-free and ubiquitous. Whilst these techniques may offer significant economic and health benefits, there are also complicated ethical questions to consider. With the promise of pervasive, safe, minimally invasive and battery free biomedical electronic implants, humans will have the choice to enhance their abilities. Naturally, the question of what it means to be human will emerge.
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    Nature of quasar disk-wind
    Yong, Suk Yee ( 2019)
    The brightest persistent astrophysical sources in the universe are quasars, a group of active galactic nuclei (AGN) that appear star-like and radiate across all wavelengths. The emitted radiation is believed to be powered by a supermassive black hole at the core of a galaxy. Matter that falls into the black hole is being fed onto the accretion disk, heating up the disk in the process due to friction. A wind emanating from the accretion disk, or a disk-wind, appears ubiquitous in these objects and acts as one effective way to generate the spectral lines observed in the quasar's spectrum. The broad spectral lines, originating from the broad line region (BLR), show diverse properties, specifically in velocity shift, line width, and degree of asymmetry. Yet, the exact structure of the BLR has remained perplexing due to its small size, which means it is unresolved even with the current astronomical instrumentation. Thus, simulations are important. By developing a model of the BLR, an informative analysis of the line profiles allows us to explore some of the key questions about the BLR, emphasising the shape of spectral lines, the disk-wind BLR, and the orientation. We simulate line profile modelling using a simple kinematical disk-wind model of the BLR with radiative transfer in the high velocity limit. The model provides a framework to explore the characteristics of the emission line profile induced by the different geometries and kinematics of the BLR, including the opening angle of the wind and the geometry of the line emitting region. The effect of orientation in these systems is also examined. As a first step, we use the model to simulate a narrow outflowing disk-wind, which has been described in the literature. The primary objective is to determine whether the observed emission line properties are consistent with a narrow wind scenario. We find that the line profiles are more blueshifted for a narrow polar wind model as opposed to intermediate and equatorial models. When viewing at pole-on angles, the simulated emission lines show a narrower line width, which is asymmetric and more blueshifted than that viewed edge-on. The blueward shift of the line profile increases as the line-of-sight and wind intersect. The model is also able to recover a shorter time delay in the red or blue side of the line profiles, consistent with observational evidence in reverberation mapping studies. The second part of the thesis considers the properties of broad absorption line quasars (BALQs). These objects are rare and often display a blueward absorption trough relative to the emission line. One interpretation of the velocity offsets is the unification based on orientation, whereby a BAL is viewed within a constrained narrow wind angle. In order to test whether the BALQs and non-BALQs can be distinguished by their emission features, we conduct statistical tests and machine learning on the two populations. We find that their continuum and emission features are qualitatively similar, which contradicts the narrow disk-wind model in the geometric unification. Therefore, we propose a model of the disk-wind comprising a wide wind opening angle with multiple dense radial streams, where the BAL is detected when the line-of-sight crosses these streams. These findings have lead us to the discovery of a novel orientation indicator of quasars in the ultraviolet-optical regime. We propose a simple yet robust angle-of-viewing probe using the correlation between the velocity shifts and line widths. Our idea is shown to be qualitatively consistent with other orientation proxies. We also perform a wide angle disk-wind simulation and successfully retrieve the predicted correlation with inclination. In addition, we extend our model to estimate the bias in the virial black hole mass due to the scale factor f, which is related to the unknown nature of the BLR. Using a wide disk-wind configuration, we retrieve the f factors for a range of inclination angle. The f factor shows significant dependence with orientation, characterisation of the line width, and location of the emission region in the wind. Therefore, using a constant f value biases the estimation of the mass of the black hole.