971 research outputs found
A very brief introduction to quantum computing and quantum information theory for mathematicians
This is a very brief introduction to quantum computing and quantum
information theory, primarily aimed at geometers. Beyond basic definitions and
examples, I emphasize aspects of interest to geometers, especially connections
with asymptotic representation theory. Proofs of most statements can be found
in standard references
Spatial patterns of scour and fill in dryland sand bed streams
Reproduced with permission of the publisher. © 2006 American Geophysical UnionSpatial patterns of scour and fill in two dryland ephemeral stream channels with sandy bed material have been measured with dense arrays of scour chains. Although the depth and areal extent of bed activity increased with discharge, active bed reworking at particular locations within the reaches resulted in downstream patterns of alternate shallower and deeper areas of scour. The variation was such that mean scour depths for individual cross sections varied about the mean for the reach by a factor of 2–4 while the locus of maximum scour traced a sinuous path about the channel centerline. The wavelength of the pattern of scour was about seven times the channel width. During each event, compensating fill returned the streambeds to preflow elevations, indicating that the streams were in approximate steady state over the period of study. Although the patterns of periodically enhanced scour along alternate sides of the channels are consistent with models of periodically reversing helical flow, further work is required to identify the causal relationships between patterns of flow and sediment transport in dryland sand bed channels
Effect of phase fluctuation and dephasing on the dynamics of entanglement generation in a correlated emission laser
A detailed study of the effects of phase fluctuation and dephasing on the
dynamics of the entanglement generated from a coherently pumped correlated
emission laser is presented. It is found that the time evolution of the
entanglement is significantly reliant on the phase fluctuation and dephasing,
particularly, at early stages of the lasing process. In the absence of external
driving radiation, the degree of entanglement and intensity turns out to attain
a maximum value just before starting to exhibit oscillation which dies at
longer time scale. However, in case the driving mechanism is on, the
oscillatory nature disappears due to the additional induced coherent
superposition and the degree of entanglement would be larger at steady state.
Moreover, the degree of entanglement as predicted by the logarithmic negativity
and the Duan-Giedke-Cirac-Zoller criteria exhibits a similar nature when there
is no driving radiation, although such a trend is eroded with increasing
strength of the pumping radiation at longer time scale. The other important
aspect of the phase fluctuation and dephasing is the possibility of relaxing
the time at which the maximum entanglement is detected.Comment: 10 pages, 10 figure
Information transfer using a single particle path-spin hybrid entangled state
The path-spin entangled state of a single spin-1/2 particle is considered
which is generated by using a beam-spitter and a spin-flipper. Using this
hybrid entanglement at the level of a single particle as a resource, we
formulate a protocol for transferring of the state of an unknown qubit to a
distant location. Our scheme is implemented by a sequence of unitary operations
along with suitable spin-measurements, as well as by using classical
communication between the two spatially separated parties. This protocol, thus,
demonstrates the possibility of using intraparticle entanglement as a physical
resource for performing information theoretic tasks
Controllable Entanglement of Lights in a Five-Level System
We analyze the nonlinear optical response of a five-level system under a
novel configuration of electro-magnetically induced transparency. We show that
a giant Kerr nonlinearity with a relatively large cross-phase modulation
coefficient that occurs in such system may be used to produce an efficient
photon-photon entanglement. We demonstrate that such photon-photon entanglement
is practically controllable and hence facilitates promising applications in
quantum information and computation.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figures, 1 column. We have added a section in which the
distortion of pulses due to the dispersion is considere
Conclusive quantum steering with superconducting transition edge sensors
Quantum steering allows two parties to verify shared entanglement even if one
measurement device is untrusted. A conclusive demonstration of steering through
the violation of a steering inequality is of considerable fundamental interest
and opens up applications in quantum communication. To date all experimental
tests with single photon states have relied on post-selection, allowing
untrusted devices to cheat by hiding unfavourable events in losses. Here we
close this "detection loophole" by combining a highly efficient source of
entangled photon pairs with superconducting transition edge sensors. We achieve
an unprecedented ~62% conditional detection efficiency of entangled photons and
violate a steering inequality with the minimal number of measurement settings
by 48 standard deviations. Our results provide a clear path to practical
applications of steering and to a photonic loophole-free Bell test.Comment: Preprint of 7 pages, 3 figures; the definitive version is published
in Nature Communications, see below. Also, see related experimental work by
A. J. Bennet et al., arXiv:1111.0739 and B. Wittmann et al., arXiv:1111.076
Quantum teleportation with nonclassical correlated states in noninertial frames
Quantum teleportation is studied in noninertial frame, for fermionic case,
when Alice and Bob share a general nonclassical correlated state. In
noninertial frames two fidelities of teleportation are given. It is found that
the average fidelity of teleportation from a separable and nonclassical
correlated state is increasing with the amount of nonclassical correlation of
the state. However, for any particular nonclassical correlated state, the
fidelity of teleportation decreases by increasing the acceleration.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, expanded version to appear in Quantum Inf.
Proces
Plum pudding random medium model of biological tissue toward remote microscopy from spectroscopic light scattering
Biological tissue has a complex structure and exhibits rich spectroscopic
behavior. There is \emph{no} tissue model up to now able to account for the
observed spectroscopy of tissue light scattering and its anisotropy. Here we
present, \emph{for the first time}, a plum pudding random medium (PPRM) model
for biological tissue which succinctly describes tissue as a superposition of
distinctive scattering structures (plum) embedded inside a fractal continuous
medium of background refractive index fluctuation (pudding). PPRM faithfully
reproduces the wavelength dependence of tissue light scattering and attributes
the "anomalous" trend in the anisotropy to the plum and the powerlaw dependence
of the reduced scattering coefficient to the fractal scattering pudding. Most
importantly, PPRM opens up a novel venue of quantifying the tissue architecture
and microscopic structures on average from macroscopic probing of the bulk with
scattered light alone without tissue excision. We demonstrate this potential by
visualizing the fine microscopic structural alterations in breast tissue
(adipose, glandular, fibrocystic, fibroadenoma, and ductal carcinoma) deduced
from noncontact spectroscopic measurement
Scaling Separability Criterion: Application To Gaussian States
We introduce examples of three- and four-mode entangled Gaussian mixed states
that are not detected by the scaling and Peres-Horodecki separability criteria.
The presented modification of the scaling criterion resolves this problem. Also
it is shown that the new criterion reproduces the main features of the scaling
pictures for different cases of entangled states, while the previous versions
lead to completely different outcomes. This property of the presented scheme is
evidence of its higher generality.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure
Gravitational redshift of galaxies in clusters as predicted by general relativity
The theoretical framework of cosmology is mainly defined by gravity, of which
general relativity is the current model. Recent tests of general relativity
within the \Lambda Cold Dark Matter (CDM) model have found a concordance
between predictions and the observations of the growth rate and clustering of
the cosmic web. General relativity has not hitherto been tested on cosmological
scales independent of the assumptions of the \Lambda CDM model. Here we report
observation of the gravitational redshift of light coming from galaxies in
clusters at the 99 per cent confidence level, based upon archival data. The
measurement agrees with the predictions of general relativity and its
modification created to explain cosmic acceleration without the need for dark
energy (f(R) theory), but is inconsistent with alternative models designed to
avoid the presence of dark matter.Comment: Published in Nature issued on 29 September 2011. This version
includes the Letter published there as well as the Supplementary Information.
23 pages, 7 figure
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