23,090 research outputs found
Information and Communication Technologies and Informal Scholarly Communication: A Review of the Social Oriented Research
This article reviews and analyzes findings from research on computer mediated informal scholarly communication. Ten empirical research papers, which show the effects and influences of information & communication technologies (ICTs), or the effects of social contexts on ICTs use in informal scholarly communication, were analyzed and compared. Types of ICTs covered in those studies include e-mails, collaboratories, and electronic forums. The review shows that most of the empirical studies examined the ICTs use effects or consequences. Only a few studies examined the social shaping of ICTs and ICT uses in informal scholarly communication. Based on comparisons of the empirical findings this article summarizes the ICT use effects/consequences as identified in the studies into seven categories and discusses their implications
Quantum Impurity in Luttinger Liquid: Universal Conductance with Entanglement Renormalization
We study numerically the universal conductance of Luttinger liquids wire with
a single impurity via the Muti-scale Entanglement Renormalization Ansatz
(MERA). The scale invariant MERA provides an efficient way to extract scaling
operators and scaling dimensions for both the bulk and the boundary conformal
field theories. By utilizing the key relationship between the conductance
tensor and ground-state correlation function, the universal conductance can be
evaluated within the framework of the boundary MERA. We construct the boundary
MERA to compute the correlation functions and scaling dimensions for the
Kane-Fisher fixed points by modeling the single impurity as a junction (weak
link) of two interacting wires. We show that the universal behavior of the
junction can be easily identified within the MERA and argue that the boundary
MERA framework has tremendous potential to classify the fixed points in general
multi-wire junctions.Comment: 14 pages, 18 figure
Dynamical invariants in non-Markovian quantum state diffusion equation
We find dynamical invariants for open quantum systems described by the
non-Markovian quantum state diffusion (QSD) equation. In stark contrast to
closed systems where the dynamical invariant can be identical to the system
density operator, these dynamical invariants no longer share the equation of
motion for the density operator. Moreover, the invariants obtained with from
bi-orthonormal basis can be used to render an exact solution to the QSD
equation and the corresponding non-Markovian dynamics without using master
equations or numerical simulations. Significantly we show that we can apply
these dynamic invariants to reverse-engineering a Hamiltonian that is capable
of driving the system to the target state, providing a novel way to design
control strategy for open quantum systems.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figure
Higher-order solutions to non-Markovian quantum dynamics via hierarchical functional derivative
Solving realistic quantum systems coupled to an environment is a challenging
task. Here we develop a hierarchical functional derivative (HFD) approach for
efficiently solving the non-Markovian quantum trajectories of an open quantum
system embedded in a bosonic bath. An explicit expression for arbitrary order
HFD equation is derived systematically. Moreover, it is found that for an
analytically solvable model, this hierarchical equation naturally terminates at
a given order and thus becomes exactly solvable. This HFD approach provides a
systematic method to study the non-Markovian quantum dynamics of an open system
coupled to a bosonic environment.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
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