2,752 research outputs found
A quantum information theoretic analysis of three flavor neutrino oscillations
Correlations exhibited by neutrino oscillations are studied via quantum
information theoretic quantities. We show that the strongest type of
entanglement, genuine multipartite entanglement, is persistent in the flavour
changing states. We prove the existence of Bell-type nonlocal features, in both
its absolute and genuine avatars. Finally, we show that a measure of
nonclassicality, dissension, which is a generalization of quantum discord to
the tripartite case, is nonzero for almost the entire range of time in the
evolution of an initial electron-neutrino. Via these quantum information
theoretic quantities capturing different aspects of quantum correlations, we
elucidate the differences between the flavour types, shedding light on the
quantum-information theoretic aspects of the weak force.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figure
Ab initio Wannier-function-based many-body approach to Born charge of crystalline insulators
In this paper we present an approach aimed at performing many-body
calculations of Born-effective charges of crystalline insulators, by including
the electron-correlation effects. The scheme is implemented entirely in the
real space, using Wannier-functions as single-particle orbitals. Correlation
effects are computed by including virtual excitations from the Hartree-Fock
mean field, and the excitations are organized as per a Bethe-Goldstone-like
many-body hierarchy. The results of our calculations suggest that the approach
presented here is promising.Comment: 5 pages, to appear in Phys. Rev. B. (Rapid Comm., Dec 15, 2004
Characterization of Unruh Channel in the context of Open Quantum Systems
We show through the Choi matrix approach that the effect of Unruh
acceleration on a qubit is similar to the interaction of the qubit with a
vacuum bath, despite the finiteness of the Unruh temperature. Thus, rather
counterintuitvely, from the perspective of decoherence in this framework, the
particle experiences a vacuum bath with a temperature-modified interaction
strength, rather than a thermal bath. We investigate how this "relativistic
decoherence" is modified by the presence of environmentally induced
decoherence, by studying the degradation of quantum information, as quantified
by parameters such as nonlocality, teleportation fidelity, entanglement,
coherence and quantum measurement-induced disturbance (a discord-like measure).
Also studied are the performance parameters such as gate and channel fidelity.
We highlight the distinction between dephasing and dissipative environmental
interactions, by considering the actions of quantum non-demolition and squeezed
generalized amplitude damping channels, respectively, where, in particular,
squeezing is shown to be a useful quantum resource.Comment: 15 pages, 19 figure
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