4,693 research outputs found
Quantum and random walks as universal generators of probability distributions
Quantum walks and random walks bear similarities and divergences. One of the
most remarkable disparities affects the probability of finding the particle at
a given location: typically, almost a flat function in the first case and a
bell-shaped one in the second case. Here I show how one can impose any desired
stochastic behavior (compatible with the continuity equation for the
probability function) on both systems by the appropriate choice of time- and
site-dependent coins. This implies, in particular, that one can devise quantum
walks that show diffusive spreading without loosing coherence, as well as
random walks that exhibit the characteristic fast propagation of a quantum
particle driven by a Hadamard coin.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures; revised and enlarged versio
Containerless processing in the European microgravity programme
Reasonable acoustic levitation for undercooled melts in space was obtained, but some residual instabilities in times of high thermal transients need to be eliminated. Electrostatic levitation was developed with the acoustic levitator with similar applications in mind. The system tested used a tetrahedral electrode configuration with unchanged samples. ESA's involvement in electromagnetic levitation is concentrated on accommodation studies for the European Containerless Processing Lab for the Space Station Freedom. The gas film technique is based on the processing of samples confined by porous walls. Air flow through the walls create air cushions which inhibit wall contact. This technique is particularly promising for glasses
High resolution bathymetric survey on the NW slope of Walvis Ridge, offshore Namibia
Expedition 17/1 of the German research vessel R/V MARIA S. MERIAN, carried out geophysical
surveys and experiments between November and December 2010 in the area
around Walvis Ridge, Southeast Atlantic Ocean. Among the data collected, a high-resolution
bathymetric dataset aquired on the northwestern slope of the ridge offers some important
preliminary insights into the tectonic evolution of the ridge and the adjoining lower
continental slopes and ocean basin. The NE-SW trending Walvis Ridge has a trapezoid
shape and is likely built up by thick sequences of plateau basalts, with top of basement
rocks inclined to the south. Sediments are almost absent on the NW side of the ridge, preserving
a fascinating mountainscape formed early in the tectonic history, most probably
on-land. This interpretation is supported by clear denudational features, like steep cliffs up
to 150 m high, and deeply incised valleys, defining paleo-drainages. Isolated, flat-topped
guyots seaward of the ocean-continent boundary attest to a later history of wave abrasion
and progressive subsidence of Walvis Ridge
Model Fractional Chern Insulators
We devise local lattice models whose ground states are model fractional Chern
insulators---Abelian and non-Abelian topologically ordered states characterized
by exact ground state degeneracies at any finite size and infinite entanglement
gaps. Most saliently, we construct exact parent Hamiltonians for two distinct
families of bosonic lattice generalizations of the parafermion
quantum Hall states: (i) color-entangled fractional Chern insulators at band
filling fractions and (ii) nematic states at ,
where is the Chern number of the lowest band in our models. In
spite of a fluctuating Berry curvature, our construction is partially
frustration free: the ground states reside entirely within the lowest band and
exactly minimize a local -body repulsion term by term. In addition to
providing the first known models hosting intriguing states such as higher Chern
number generalizations of the Fibonacci anyon quantum Hall states, the
remarkable stability and finite-size properties make our models particularly
well-suited for the study of novel phenomena involving e.g. twist defects and
proximity induced superconductivity, as well as being a guide for designing
experiments.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figure
Better abstractions for timed automata
We consider the reachability problem for timed automata. A standard solution
to this problem involves computing a search tree whose nodes are abstractions
of zones. These abstractions preserve underlying simulation relations on the
state space of the automaton. For both effectiveness and efficiency reasons,
they are parametrized by the maximal lower and upper bounds (LU-bounds)
occurring in the guards of the automaton. We consider the aLU abstraction
defined by Behrmann et al. Since this abstraction can potentially yield
non-convex sets, it has not been used in implementations. We prove that aLU
abstraction is the biggest abstraction with respect to LU-bounds that is sound
and complete for reachability. We also provide an efficient technique to use
the aLU abstraction to solve the reachability problem.Comment: Extended version of LICS 2012 paper (conference paper till v6). in
Information and Computation, available online 27 July 201
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