5,536 research outputs found
Diversifying Clearinghouse Ownership In Order To Safeguard Free And Open Access To The Derivatives Clearing Market
Implementing the rigorous governance and ownership standards established in the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act3 for derivatives clearing organizations (DCOs) will promote free and open access to clearing and reduce systemic risk within what is now the 50 million threshold for DCO membership—promises to both improve swap users‘ access to clearing and ensure greater stability within the derivatives clearing market. Finally, the article argues that the CFTC should strengthen its proposed governance standards for DCOs in order to safeguard swap users‘ access to clearing against the possibility that the CFTC‘s participant eligibility requirements fail to increase DCO membership
Ladder proof of nonlocality for two spin-half particles revisited
In this paper we extend the ladder proof of nonlocality without inequalities
for two spin-half particles given by Boschi et al [PRL 79, 2755 (1997)] to the
case in which the measurement settings of the apparatus measuring one of the
particles are different from the measurement settings of the apparatus
measuring the other particle. It is shown that, in any case, the proportion of
particle pairs for which the contradiction with local realism goes through is
maximized when the measurement settings are the same for each apparatus. Also
we write down a Bell inequality for the experiment in question which is
violated by quantum mechanics by an amount which is twice as much as the amount
by which quantum mechanics violates the Bell inequality considered in the above
paper by Boschi et al.Comment: LaTeX, 7 pages, 1 figure, journal versio
Mermin's n-particle Bell inequality and operators' noncommutativity
The relationship between the noncommutativity of operators and the violation
of the Bell inequality is exhibited in the light of the n-particle Bell-type
inequality discovered by Mermin [PRL 65, 1838 (1990)]. It is shown, in
particular, that the maximal amount of violation of Mermin's inequality
predicted by quantum mechanics decreases exponentially by a factor of 2^{-m/2}
whenever any m among the n single-particle commutators happen to vanish.Comment: LaTeX file, 10 page
Preparation of n-qubit Greenberger-Horne-Zeilinger entangled states in cavity QED: An approach with tolerance to nonidentical qubit-cavity coupling constants
We propose a way for generating -qubit Greenberger-Horne-Zeilinger (GHZ)
entangled states with a three-level qubit system and (n-1) four-level qubit
systems in a cavity. This proposal does not require identical qubit-cavity
coupling constants, and thus is tolerant to qubit-system parameter
nonuniformity and nonexact placement of qubits in a cavity. The proposal does
not require adjustment of the qubit-system level spacings during the entire
operation. Moreover, it is shown that entanglement can be deterministically
generated using this method and the operation time is independent of the number
of qubits. The present proposal is quite general, which can be applied to
physical systems such as various types of superconducting devices coupled to a
resonator or atoms trapped in a cavity.Comment: 3 figures, accepted by Phys. Rev.
A feasible quantum optical experiment capable of refuting noncontextuality for single photons
Elaborating on a previous work by Simon et al. [PRL 85, 1783 (2000)] we
propose a realizable quantum optical single-photon experiment using standard
present day technology, capable of discriminating maximally between the
predictions of quantum mechanics (QM) and noncontextual hidden variable
theories (NCHV). Quantum mechanics predicts a gross violation (up to a factor
of 2) of the noncontextual Bell-like inequality associated with the proposed
experiment. An actual maximal violation of this inequality would demonstrate
(modulo fair sampling) an all-or-nothing type contradiction between QM and
NCHV.Comment: LaTeX file, 8 pages, 1 figur
Comment on "Bell's Theorem without Inequalities and without Probabilities for Two Observers"
In this Comment we show that Cabello's argument [Phys. Rev. Lett. 86, 1911
(2001)] which proves the nonlocal feature of any classical model of quantum
mechanics based on Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen (EPR) criterion of elements of
reality, must involve at least four distant observers rather than the two
employed by the author. Moreover we raise a remark on the necessity of
performing a real experiment confirming Cabello's argument.Comment: 1 page, REVTex4 fil
Bell's theorem without inequalities and without alignments
A proof of Bell's theorem without inequalities is presented which exhibits
three remarkable properties: (a) reduced local states are immune to collective
decoherence; (b) distant local setups do not need to be aligned, since the
required perfect correlations are achieved for any local rotation of the local
setups; (c) local measurements require only individual measurements on the
qubits. Indeed, it is shown that this proof is essentially the only one which
fulfils (a), (b), and (c).Comment: REVTeX4, 4 page
Conditions for the confirmation of three-particle non-locality
The notion of genuine three-particle non-locality introduced by Svetlichny
\cite{Svetlichny} is discussed. Svetlichny's inequality which can distinguish
between genuine three-particle non-locality and two-particle non-locality is
analyzed by reinterpreting it as a frustrated network of correlations. Its
quantum mechanical maximum violation is derived and a situation is presented
that produces the maximum violation. It is shown that the measurements
performed in recent experiments to demonstrate GHZ entanglement
\cite{Bouwmeester}, \cite{Pan} do not allow this inequality to be violated, and
hence can not be taken as confirmation of genuine three-particle non-locality.
Modifications to the experiments that would make such a confirmation possible
are discussed.Comment: minor revisions, references adde
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