2,830 research outputs found
Teleportation of continuous quantum variables
Quantum teleportation is analyzed for states of dynamical variables with continuous spectra, in contrast to previous work with discrete (spin) variables. The entanglement fidelity of the scheme is computed, including the roles of finite quantum correlation and nonideal detection efficiency. A protocol is presented for teleporting the wave function of a single mode of the electromagnetic field with high fidelity using squeezed-state entanglement and current experimental capability
Predicting the extinction of Ebola spreading in Liberia due to mitigation strategies
The Ebola virus is spreading throughout West Africa and is causing thousands
of deaths. In order to quantify the effectiveness of different strategies for
controlling the spread, we develop a mathematical model in which the
propagation of the Ebola virus through Liberia is caused by travel between
counties. For the initial months in which the Ebola virus spreads, we find that
the arrival times of the disease into the counties predicted by our model are
compatible with World Health Organization data, but we also find that reducing
mobility is insufficient to contain the epidemic because it delays the arrival
of Ebola virus in each county by only a few weeks. We study the effect of a
strategy in which safe burials are increased and effective hospitalisation
instituted under two scenarios: (i) one implemented in mid-July 2014 and (ii)
one in mid-August---which was the actual time that strong interventions began
in Liberia. We find that if scenario (i) had been pursued the lifetime of the
epidemic would have been three months shorter and the total number of infected
individuals 80\% less than in scenario (ii). Our projection under scenario (ii)
is that the spreading will stop by mid-spring 2015
How to measure squeezing and entanglement of Gaussian states without homodyning
We propose a scheme for measuring the squeezing, purity, and entanglement of
Gaussian states of light that does not require homodyne detection. The
suggested setup only needs beam splitters and single-photon detectors. Two-mode
entanglement can be detected from coincidences between photodetectors placed on
the two beams.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, RevTe
Predicting the extinction of Ebola spreading in Liberia due to mitigation strategies
The Ebola virus is spreading throughout West Africa and is causing thousands of deaths. In order to quantify the effectiveness of different strategies for controlling the spread, we develop a mathematical model in which the propagation of the Ebola virus through Liberia is caused by travel between counties. For the initial months in which the Ebola virus spreads, we find that the arrival times of the disease into the counties predicted by our model are compatible with World Health Organization data, but we also find that reducing mobility is insufficient to contain the epidemic because it delays the arrival of Ebola virus in each county by only a few weeks. We study the effect of a strategy in which safe burials are increased and effective hospitalisation instituted under two scenarios: (i) one implemented in mid-July 2014 and (ii) one in mid-August—which was the actual time that strong interventions began in Liberia. We find that if scenario (i) had been pursued the lifetime of the epidemic would have been three months shorter and the total number of infected individuals 80% less than in scenario (ii). Our projection under scenario (ii) is that the spreading will stop by mid-spring 2015.H.E.S. thanks the NSF (grants CMMI 1125290 and CHE-1213217) and the Keck Foundation for financial support. L.D.V. and L.A.B. wish to thank to UNMdP and FONCyT (Pict 0429/2013) for financial support. (CMMI 1125290 - NSF; CHE-1213217 - NSF; Keck Foundation; UNMdP; Pict 0429/2013 - FONCyT)Published versio
Directed percolation depinning models: Evolution equations
We present the microscopic equation for the growing interface with quenched
noise for the model first presented by Buldyrev et al. [Phys. Rev. A 45, R8313
(1992)]. The evolution equation for the height, the mean height, and the
roughness are reached in a simple way. The microscopic equation allows us to
express these equations in two contributions: the contact and the local one. We
compare this two contributions with the ones obtained for the Tang and
Leschhorn model [Phys. Rev A 45, R8309 (1992)] by Braunstein et al. [Physica A
266, 308 (1999)]. Even when the microscopic mechanisms are quiet different in
both model, the two contribution are qualitatively similar. An interesting
result is that the diffusion contribution, in the Tang and Leschhorn model, and
the contact one, in the Buldyrev model, leads to an increase of the roughness
near the criticality.Comment: 10 pages and 4 figures. To be published in Phys. Rev.
Epidemic Model with Isolation in Multilayer Networks
The Susceptible-Infected-Recovered (SIR) model has successfully mimicked the
propagation of such airborne diseases as influenza A (H1N1). Although the SIR
model has recently been studied in a multilayer networks configuration, in
almost all the research the isolation of infected individuals is disregarded.
Hence we focus our study in an epidemic model in a two-layer network, and we
use an isolation parameter to measure the effect of isolating infected
individuals from both layers during an isolation period. We call this process
the Susceptible-Infected-Isolated-Recovered () model. The isolation
reduces the transmission of the disease because the time in which infection can
spread is reduced. In this scenario we find that the epidemic threshold
increases with the isolation period and the isolation parameter. When the
isolation period is maximum there is a threshold for the isolation parameter
above which the disease never becomes an epidemic. We also find that epidemic
models, like overestimate the theoretical risk of infection. Finally, our
model may provide a foundation for future research to study the temporal
evolution of the disease calibrating our model with real data.Comment: 18 pages, 5 figures.Accepted in Scientific Report
Quantum versus classical domains for teleportation with continuous variables
By considering the utilization of a classical channel without quantum entanglement, fidelity Fclassical=1/2 has been established as setting the boundary between classical and quantum domains in the teleportation of coherent states of the electromagnetic field [S. L. Braunstein, C. A. Fuchs, and H. J. Kimble, J. Mod. Opt. 47, 267 (2000)]. We further examine the quantum-classical boundary by investigating questions of entanglement and Bell-inequality violations for the Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen states relevant to continuous variable teleportation. The threshold fidelity for employing entanglement as a quantum resource in teleportation of coherent states is again found to be Fclassical=1/2. Likewise, violations of local realism onset at this same threshold, with the added requirement of overall efficiency η>2/3 in the unconditional case. By contrast, recently proposed criteria adapted from the literature on quantum-nondemolition detection are shown to be largely unrelated to the questions of entanglement and Bell-inequality violations
Strong quantitative benchmarking of quantum optical devices
Quantum communication devices, such as quantum repeaters, quantum memories,
or quantum channels, are unavoidably exposed to imperfections. However, the
presence of imperfections can be tolerated, as long as we can verify such
devices retain their quantum advantages. Benchmarks based on witnessing
entanglement have proven useful for verifying the true quantum nature of these
devices. The next challenge is to characterize how strongly a device is within
the quantum domain. We present a method, based on entanglement measures and
rigorous state truncation, which allows us to characterize the degree of
quantumness of optical devices. This method serves as a quantitative extension
to a large class of previously-known quantum benchmarks, requiring no
additional information beyond what is already used for the non-quantitative
benchmarks.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures. Comments are welcome. ver 2: Improved figures,
no changes to main tex
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