8,789 research outputs found
Universality in the Gravitational Stretching of Clocks, Waves and Quantum States
There are discernible and fundamental differences between clocks, waves and
physical states in classical physics. These fundamental concepts find a common
expression in the context of quantum physics in gravitational fields; matter
and light waves, quantum states and oscillator clocks become quantum synonymous
through the Planck-Einstein-de Broglie relations and the equivalence principle.
With this insight, gravitational effects on quantum systems can be simply and
accurately analyzed. Apart from providing a transparent framework for
conceptual and quantitative thinking on matter waves and quantum states in a
gravitational field, we address and resolve with clarity the recent
controversial discussions on the important issue of the relation and the
crucial difference between gravimetery using atom interferometers and the
measurement of gravitational time dilation.Comment: Gravity Research Foundation honorable mention, 201
Sampling and Reconstruction of Spatial Fields using Mobile Sensors
Spatial sampling is traditionally studied in a static setting where static
sensors scattered around space take measurements of the spatial field at their
locations. In this paper we study the emerging paradigm of sampling and
reconstructing spatial fields using sensors that move through space. We show
that mobile sensing offers some unique advantages over static sensing in
sensing time-invariant bandlimited spatial fields. Since a moving sensor
encounters such a spatial field along its path as a time-domain signal, a
time-domain anti-aliasing filter can be employed prior to sampling the signal
received at the sensor. Such a filtering procedure, when used by a
configuration of sensors moving at constant speeds along equispaced parallel
lines, leads to a complete suppression of spatial aliasing in the direction of
motion of the sensors. We analytically quantify the advantage of using such a
sampling scheme over a static sampling scheme by computing the reduction in
sampling noise due to the filter. We also analyze the effects of non-uniform
sensor speeds on the reconstruction accuracy. Using simulation examples we
demonstrate the advantages of mobile sampling over static sampling in practical
problems.
We extend our analysis to sampling and reconstruction schemes for monitoring
time-varying bandlimited fields using mobile sensors. We demonstrate that in
some situations we require a lower density of sensors when using a mobile
sensing scheme instead of the conventional static sensing scheme. The exact
advantage is quantified for a problem of sampling and reconstructing an audio
field.Comment: Submitted to IEEE Transactions on Signal Processing May 2012; revised
Oct 201
Authenticated teleportation with one-sided trust
We introduce a protocol for authenticated teleportation, which can be proven
secure even when the receiver does not trust their measurement devices, and is
experimentally accessible. We use the technique of self-testing from the
device-independent approach to quantum information, where we can characterise
quantum states and measurements from the exhibited classical correlations
alone. First, we derive self-testing bounds for the Bell state and Pauli
measurements, that are robust enough to be implemented in
the lab. Then, we use these to determine a lower bound on the fidelity of an
untested entangled state to be used for teleportation. Finally, we apply our
results to propose an experimentally feasible protocol for one-sided
device-independent authenticated teleportation. This can be interpreted as a
first practical authentication of a quantum channel, with additional one-sided
device-independence.Comment: published versio
Nano-constraints on the spatial anisotropy of the Gravitational Constant
We present constraints from various experimental data that limit any spatial
anisotropy of the Gravitational constant to less than a part per billion or
even smaller. This rules out with a wide margin the recently reported claim of
a spatial anisotropy of G with a diurnal temporal signature.Comment: Standard LaTex, 7 page
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