466 research outputs found

    Constrained Dynamics: Generalized Lie Symmetries, Singular Lagrangians, and the Passage to Hamiltonian Mechanics

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    Guided by the symmetries of the Euler-Lagrange equations of motion, a study of the constrained dynamics of singular Lagrangians is presented. We find that these equations of motion admit a generalized Lie symmetry, and on the Lagrangian phase space the generators of this symmetry lie in the kernel of the Lagrangian two-form. Solutions of the energy equation\textemdash called second-order, Euler-Lagrange vector fields (SOELVFs)\textemdash with integral flows that have this symmetry are determined. Importantly, while second-order, Lagrangian vector fields are not such a solution, it is always possible to construct from them a SOELVF that is. We find that all SOELVFs are projectable to the Hamiltonian phase space, as are all the dynamical structures in the Lagrangian phase space needed for their evolution. In particular, the primary Hamiltonian constraints can be constructed from vectors that lie in the kernel of the Lagrangian two-form, and with this construction, we show that the Lagrangian constraint algorithm for the SOELVF is equivalent to the stability analysis of the total Hamiltonian. Importantly, the end result of this stability analysis gives a Hamiltonian vector field that is the projection of the SOELVF obtained from the Lagrangian constraint algorithm. The Lagrangian and Hamiltonian formulations of mechanics for singular Lagrangians are in this way equivalent.Comment: 45 pages. Published paper is open access, and can be found either at the Journal of Physics Communications website or at the DOI belo

    Generalized Lie Symmetries and Almost Regular Lagrangians: A Link Between Symmetry and Dynamics

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    The generalized Lie symmetries of almost regular Lagrangians are studied, and their impact on the evolution of dynamical systems is determined. It is found that if the action has a generalized Lie symmetry, then the Lagrangian is necessarily singular; the converse is not true, as we show with a specific example. It is also found that the generalized Lie symmetry of the action is a Lie subgroup of the generalized Lie symmetry of the Euler-Lagrange equations of motion. The converse is once again not true, and there are systems for which the Euler-Lagrange equations of motion have a generalized Lie symmetry while the action does not, as we once again show through a specific example. Most importantly, it is shown that each generalized Lie symmetry of the action contributes one arbitrary function to the evolution of the dynamical system. The number of such symmetries gives a lower bound to the dimensionality of the family of curves emanating from any set of allowed initial data in the Lagrangian phase space. Moreover, if second- or higher-order Lagrangian constraints are introduced during the application of the Lagrangian constraint algorithm, these additional constraints could not have been due to the generalized Lie symmetry of the action.Comment: 34 pages with one table. Published paper is open access, and can be found either at the Journal of Physics Communications website or at the DOI below. This is a follow-up paper to "Constrained Dynamics: Generalized Lie Symmetries, Singular Lagrangians, and the Passage to Hamiltonian Mechanics", DOI: 10.1088/2399-6528/ab923c. arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:2006.0261

    Efficient measurement-based quantum computing with continuous-variable systems

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    We present strictly efficient schemes for scalable measurement-based quantum computing using continuous-variable systems: These schemes are based on suitable non-Gaussian resource states, ones that can be prepared using interactions of light with matter systems or even purely optically. Merely Gaussian measurements such as optical homodyning as well as photon counting measurements are required, on individual sites. These schemes overcome limitations posed by Gaussian cluster states, which are known not to be universal for quantum computations of unbounded length, unless one is willing to scale the degree of squeezing with the total system size. We establish a framework derived from tensor networks and matrix product states with infinite physical dimension and finite auxiliary dimension general enough to provide a framework for such schemes. Since in the discussed schemes the logical encoding is finite-dimensional, tools of error correction are applicable. We also identify some further limitations for any continuous-variable computing scheme from which one can argue that no substantially easier ways of continuous-variable measurement-based computing than the presented one can exist.Comment: 13 pages, 3 figures, published versio

    Noise-free high-efficiency photon-number-resolving detectors

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    High-efficiency optical detectors that can determine the number of photons in a pulse of monochromatic light have applications in a variety of physics studies, including post-selection-based entanglement protocols for linear optics quantum computing and experiments that simultaneously close the detection and communication loopholes of Bell's inequalities. Here we report on our demonstration of fiber-coupled, noise-free, photon-number-resolving transition-edge sensors with 88% efficiency at 1550 nm. The efficiency of these sensors could be made even higher at any wavelength in the visible and near-infrared spectrum without resulting in a higher dark-count rate or degraded photon-number resolution.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures Published in Physical Review A, Rapid Communications, 17 June 200

    LITTER PRODUCTION AND DECOMPOSITION DURING SUCCESSION IN ATLANTIC TROPICAL FOREST, BRAZIL

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    Landslides are natural features of the Atlantic rainforest environment, causing various changes to the landscape, both from ecological and hydrological viewpoints. This paper observed how litterfall production and litter decomposition works in three landslide areas, taking into account the morphological characteristics of each, which vary in size and shape, always comparing them to an area of a late secondary forest. It was found that the larger landslides show conditions less favorable to decomposition, have less litterfall and a greater spread of edge effect, that can be seen by higher litter production, higher decomposition time at the edges. The edge effect can also be perceived by the structural characteristics of the vegetation. The succession in landslides scars is more complex than in areas where there were burnings and even the introduction of pastures, since the latter have better soil conditions that do not occur in gaps whose succession practically occurs on saprolite. In tropical areas, this is a particular problem given the importance of decomposition dynamics in these ecosystems.  The diversity of habitats created by these landslides gaps can be closely associated with the typical high biodiversity of these ecosystems, directly influencing their dynamics and their resilienc

    Shared Responsibilities for Nuclear Disarmament: A Global Debate

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    Presents Sagan's 2009 paper calling for rethinking the balance of responsibilities and the relationship between articles in the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty with seven response papers by international scholars about how to pursue nuclear disarmament

    Pulsed squeezed vacuum characterization without homodyning

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    Direct photon detection is experimentally implemented to measure the squeezing and purity of a single-mode squeezed vacuum state without an interferometric homodyne detection. Following a recent theoretical proposal [arXiv quant-ph/0311119], the setup only requires a tunable beamsplitter and a single-photon detector to fully characterize the generated Gaussian states. The experimental implementation of this procedure is discussed and compared with other reference methods.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figure
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