2,134 research outputs found
State-independent quantum contextuality for continuous variables
Recent experiments have shown that nature violates noncontextual inequalities
regardless of the state of the physical system. So far, all these inequalities
involve measurements of dichotomic observables. We show that state-independent
quantum contextuality can also be observed in the correlations between
measurements of observables with genuinely continuous spectra, highlighting the
universal character of the effect.Comment: REVTeX4-1, 5 page
Kochen-Specker set with seven contexts
The Kochen-Specker (KS) theorem is a central result in quantum theory and has
applications in quantum information. Its proof requires several yes-no tests
that can be grouped in contexts or subsets of jointly measurable tests.
Arguably, the best measure of simplicity of a KS set is the number of contexts.
The smaller this number is, the smaller the number of experiments needed to
reveal the conflict between quantum theory and noncontextual theories and to
get a quantum vs classical outperformance. The original KS set had 132
contexts. Here we introduce a KS set with seven contexts and prove that this is
the simplest KS set that admits a symmetric parity proof.Comment: REVTeX4, 7 pages, 1 figur
Memory cost of quantum contextuality
The simulation of quantum effects requires certain classical resources, and
quantifying them is an important step in order to characterize the difference
between quantum and classical physics. For a simulation of the phenomenon of
state-independent quantum contextuality, we show that the minimal amount of
memory used by the simulation is the critical resource. We derive optimal
simulation strategies for important cases and prove that reproducing the
results of sequential measurements on a two-qubit system requires more memory
than the information carrying capacity of the system.Comment: 18 pages, no figures, v2: revised for clarit
Basic exclusivity graphs in quantum correlations
A fundamental problem is to understand why quantum theory only violates some
noncontextuality (NC) inequalities and identify the physical principles that
prevent higher-than-quantum violations. We prove that quantum theory only
violates those NC inequalities whose exclusivity graphs contain, as induced
subgraphs, odd cycles of length five or more, and/or their complements. In
addition, we show that odd cycles are the exclusivity graphs of a well-known
family of NC inequalities and that there is also a family of NC inequalities
whose exclusivity graphs are the complements of odd cycles. We characterize the
maximum noncontextual and quantum values of these inequalities, and provide
evidence supporting the conjecture that the maximum quantum violation of these
inequalities is exactly singled out by the exclusivity principle.Comment: REVTeX4, 7 pages, 2 figure
Quantum social networks
We introduce a physical approach to social networks (SNs) in which each actor
is characterized by a yes-no test on a physical system. This allows us to
consider SNs beyond those originated by interactions based on pre-existing
properties, as in a classical SN (CSN). As an example of SNs beyond CSNs, we
introduce quantum SNs (QSNs) in which actor is characterized by a test of
whether or not the system is in a quantum state. We show that QSNs outperform
CSNs for a certain task and some graphs. We identify the simplest of these
graphs and show that graphs in which QSNs outperform CSNs are increasingly
frequent as the number of vertices increases. We also discuss more general SNs
and identify the simplest graphs in which QSNs cannot be outperformed.Comment: REVTeX4, 6 pages, 3 figure
Is emamectin benzoate effective against the different stages of Spodoptera exigua (Hübner) (Lepidoptera, Noctuidae)?
peer-reviewedThis work was partially supported by the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation (project AGL 2007-66130-C03-02 to P. Medina). F. Amor and P. Bengochea acknowledge the ministry of Education
and Culture and the Technical University of Madrid (UPM) for the doctoral fellowships. Special thanks to Syngenta Agro S.A. for their support.The beet armyworm, Spodoptera exigua (Hübner) (Lepidoptera, Noctuidae), is a major
polyphagous pest in greenhouses and open fields worldwide and also a main problem
in sweet pepper greenhouses. The effectiveness of the pesticide emamectin benzoate was tested in the laboratory on different stages of S. exigua using different concentrations and uptake routes. After dipping young (48-h-old) S. exigua eggs in emamectin benzoate at 0.5, 1 and 1.5 mg/L a.i. the chemical did not exhibit any ovicidal activity. There was, however, progressive neonate mortality at all concentrations,
culminating at 72 hours after hatching, when 100% of the larvae from the treated young
eggs died. Second and fourth instar S. exigua larvae did not exhibit significant mortality when exposed to the inert surfaces which were treated. In contrast, ingesting a diet contaminated with 0.5 mg/L a.i. of emamectin benzoate caused 100% mortality in L2 and L4 larvae 24 and 72 hours after ingestion, respectively. The LC50 value of the compound against L4 larvae that fed on sprayed sweet pepper leaves for 24 hours was 0.81 mg/L a.i..
When adults were fed on a solution of 0.5 mg/L a.i., there was a reduction in the female and male lifespan of 29.3% and 55.3%, respectively. Fecundity was reduced by more than 99%. These data suggest that emamectin benzoate is not only a useful insecticide when ingested by beet armyworm larvae but it also has ovolarvicidal and adult activity.Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovatio
Pupal surveys for Aedes aegypti surveillance and potential targeted control in residential areas of Mérida, México.
A mosquito larval-pupal survey was conducted in 1,160 households of the Mexican city of Mérida during the rainy season of 2003 to determine their differential productivity for Aedes aegypti. Larvae and pupae were detected in 15 broad categories of container types. All breeding sites were found in the patios (backyards) and were potentially rain filled. Ae. aegypti pupae were produced from all categories of breeding site, and no single container type was predominately responsible for pupal production. The most productive buckets comprised 42% of the pupae-positive containers and provided 34% of the total pupae collected. Pupal production in buckets, together with plastic rubbish, pet dishes and basins, utensils for cooking and washing, tires, and flowerpots, accounted for almost 87% of pupal production. However, the most important pupal producers had low infestation indices for immature forms, illustrating that the use of positive-container indices can underestimate the importance of certain breeding sites. Overall, 40% of containers that were observed harboring Ae. aegypti pupae were classified as disposable. The remaining containers were considered useful, although some were seldom used. The discussion focuses on the potential utility of the pupal survey for targeting control, and its resulting pupae-per-person entomological indicator, both for comparison with a theoretical threshold for dengue transmission and for targeting vector control in this Mexican city
Zero-th law in structural glasses: an example
We investigate the validity of a zeroth thermodynamic law for non-equilibrium
systems. In order to describe the thermodynamics of the glassy systems, it has
been introduced an extra parameter, the effective temperature which generalizes
the fluctuation-dissipation theorem (FDT) to off-equilibrium systems and
supposedly describes thermal fluctuations around the aging state. In particular
we analyze two coupled systems of harmonic oscillators with Monte Carlo
dynamics. We study in detail two types of dynamics: sequential dynamics, where
the coupling between the subsystems comes only from the Hamiltonian; and
parallel dynamics where there is another source of coupling: the dynamics. We
show how in the first case the effective temperatures of the two interacting
subsystems are different asymptotically due to the smallness of the thermal
conductivity in the aging regime. This explains why, in structural glasses,
different interacting degrees of freedom can stay at different effective
temperatures, and never thermalize.Comment: 10 pages. Contribution to the Proceedings of the ESF SPHINX meeting
`Glassy behaviour of kinetically constrained models' (Barcelona, March 22-25,
2001). To appear in a special issue of J. Phys. Cond. Mat
K-Band TWTA for the NASA Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter
This paper presents the K-Band traveling wave tube amplifier (TWTA) developed for the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter and discusses the new capabilities it provides
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