1,809 research outputs found
Entanglement and the linearity of quantum mechanics
Optimal universal entanglement processes are discussed which entangle two
quantum systems in an optimal way for all possible initial states. It is
demonstrated that the linear character of quantum theory which enforces the
peaceful coexistence of quantum mechanics and relativity imposes severe
restrictions on the structure of the resulting optimally entangled states.
Depending on the dimension of the one-particle Hilbert space such a universal
process generates either a pure Bell state or mixed entangled states. In the
limit of very large dimensions of the one-particle Hilbert space the
von-Neumann entropy of the optimally entangled state differs from the one of
the maximally mixed two-particle state by one bit only.Comment: Proceedings of the X International Symposium on Theoretical
Electrical Engineering, ISTET 99, Magdebur
Destruction of quantum coherence and wave packet dynamic
The main aim of this article is to discuss characteristic physical phenomena
which govern the destruction of quantum coherence of material wave packets.Comment: to be published in `The Physics and Chemistry of Wave Packets',
edited by J. A. Yeazell and T. Uzer (Wiley, N. Y.
Robustness of the BB84 quantum key distribution protocol against general coherent attacks
It is demonstrated that for the entanglement-based version of the
Bennett-Brassard (BB84) quantum key distribution protocol, Alice and Bob share
provable entanglement if and only if the estimated qubit error rate is below
25% or above 75%. In view of the intimate relation between entanglement and
security, this result sheds also new light on the unconditional security of the
BB84 protocol in its original prepare-and-measure form. In particular, it
indicates that for small qubit error rates 25% is the ultimate upper security
bound for any prepare-and-measure BB84-type QKD protocol. On the contrary, for
qubit error rates between 25% and 75% we demonstrate that the correlations
shared between Alice and Bob can always be explained by separable states and
thus, no secret key can be distilled in this regime.Comment: New improved version. A minor mistake has been eliminate
Completely positive covariant two-qubit quantum processes and optimal quantum NOT operations for entangled qubit pairs
The structure of all completely positive quantum operations is investigated
which transform pure two-qubit input states of a given degree of entanglement
in a covariant way. Special cases thereof are quantum NOT operations which
transform entangled pure two-qubit input states of a given degree of
entanglement into orthogonal states in an optimal way. Based on our general
analysis all covariant optimal two-qubit quantum NOT operations are determined.
In particular, it is demonstrated that only in the case of maximally entangled
input states these quantum NOT operations can be performed perfectly.Comment: 14 pages, 2 figure
Random unitary dynamics of quantum networks
We investigate the asymptotic dynamics of quantum networks under repeated
applications of random unitary operations. It is shown that in the asymptotic
limit of large numbers of iterations this dynamics is generally governed by a
typically low dimensional attractor space. This space is determined completely
by the unitary operations involved and it is independent of the probabilities
with which these unitary operations are applied. Based on this general feature
analytical results are presented for the asymptotic dynamics of arbitrarily
large cyclic qubit networks whose nodes are coupled by randomly applied
controlled-NOT operations.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Biomedical modeling: the role of transport and mechanics
This issue contains a series of papers that were invited following a workshop held in July 2011 at the University of Notre Dame London Center. The goal of the workshop was to present the latest advances in theory, experimentation, and modeling methodologies related to the role of mechanics in biological systems. Growth, morphogenesis, and many diseases are characterized by time dependent changes in the material properties of tissues—affected by resident cells—that, in turn, affect the function of the tissue and contribute to, or mitigate, the disease. Mathematical modeling and simulation are essential for testing and developing scientific hypotheses related to the physical behavior of biological tissues, because of the complex geometries, inhomogeneous properties, rate dependences, and nonlinear feedback interactions that it entails
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