5,796 research outputs found
Why Newton's gravity is practically reliable in the large-scale cosmological simulations
Until now, it has been common to use Newton's gravity to study the non-linear
clustering properties of the large-scale structures. Without confirmation from
Einstein's theory, however, it has been unclear whether we can rely on the
analysis, for example, near the horizon scale. In this work we will provide a
confirmation of using Newton's gravity in cosmology based on relativistic
analysis of weakly non-linear situations to the third order in perturbations.
We will show that, except for the gravitational wave contribution, the
relativistic zero-pressure fluid equations perturbed to the second order in a
flat Friedmann background coincide exactly with the Newtonian results. We will
also present the pure relativistic correction terms appearing in the third
order. The third-order correction terms show that these are the linear-order
curvature perturbation strength higher than the second-order
relativistic/Newtonian terms. Thus, the pure general relativistic corrections
in the third order are independent of the horizon scale and are small in the
large-scale due to the low-level temperature anisotropy of the cosmic microwave
background radiation. Since we include the cosmological constant, our results
are relevant to currently favoured cosmology. As we prove that the Newtonian
hydrodynamic equations are valid in all cosmological scales to the second
order, and that the third-order correction terms are small, our result has a
practically important implication that one can now use the large-scale
Newtonian numerical simulation more reliably as the simulation scale approaches
and even goes beyond the horizon.Comment: 8 pages, no figur
Vacuum state truncation via the quantum Zeno effect
In the context of quantum state engineering we analyze the effect of
observation on nonlinear optical -photon Fock state generation. We show that
it is possible to truncate the vacuum component from an arbitrary photon number
superposition without modifying its remaining parts. In the course of the full
dynamical analysis of the effect of observation, it is also found that the Zeno
and the anti-Zeno effects repeat periodically. We discuss the close
relationship between vacuum state truncation and so-called "interaction-free"
measurement.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, LaTeX; TeX errors fixe
Detecting the degree of macroscopic quantumness using an overlap measurement
We investigate how to experimentally detect a recently proposed measure to
quantify macroscopic quantum superpositions [Phys. Rev. Lett. 106, 220401
(2011)], namely, "macroscopic quantumness" . Schemes based on
overlap measurements for harmonic oscillator states and for qubit states are
extensively investigated. Effects of detection inefficiency and coarse-graining
are analyzed in order to assess feasibility of the schemes.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figures, to be published in J. Opt. Soc. Am.
Coulomb Drag near the metal-insulator transition in two-dimensions
We studied the drag resistivity between dilute two-dimensional hole systems,
near the apparent metal-insulator transition. We find the deviations from the
dependence of the drag to be independent of layer spacing and
correlated with the metalliclike behavior in the single layer resistivity,
suggesting they both arise from the same origin. In addition, layer spacing
dependence measurements suggest that while the screening properties of the
system remain relatively independent of temperature, they weaken significantly
as the carrier density is reduced. Finally, we demonstrate that the drag itself
significantly enhances the metallic dependence in the single layer
resistivity.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures; revisions to text, to appear in Phys. Rev.
Work distribution for the driven harmonic oscillator with time-dependent strength: Exact solution and slow driving
We study the work distribution of a single particle moving in a harmonic
oscillator with time-dependent strength. This simple system has a non-Gaussian
work distribution with exponential tails. The time evolution of the
corresponding moment generating function is given by two coupled ordinary
differential equations that are solved numerically. Based on this result we
study the behavior of the work distribution in the limit of slow but finite
driving and show that it approaches a Gaussian distribution arbitrarily well
Counterfactual Quantum Cryptography
Quantum cryptography allows one to distribute a secret key between two remote
parties using the fundamental principles of quantum mechanics. The well-known
established paradigm for the quantum key distribution relies on the actual
transmission of signal particle through a quantum channel. This paper shows
that the task of a secret key distribution can be accomplished even though a
particle carrying secret information is not in fact transmitted through the
quantum channel. The proposed protocols can be implemented with current
technologies and provide practical security advantages by eliminating the
possibility that an eavesdropper can directly access the entire quantum system
of each signal particle.Comment: 19 pages, 1 figure; a little ambiguity in the version 1 removed;
abstract, text, references, and appendix revised; suggestions and comments
are highly appreciate
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