5,153 research outputs found
Collective and static properties of model two-component plasmas
Classical MD data on the charge-charge dynamic structure factor of
two-component plasmas (TCP) modeled in Phys. Rev. A 23, 2041 (1981) are
analyzed using the sum rules and other exact relations. The convergent power
moments of the imaginary part of the model system dielectric function are
expressed in terms of its partial static structure factors, which are computed
by the method of hypernetted chains using the Deutsch effective potential.
High-frequency asymptotic behavior of the dielectric function is specified to
include the effects of inverse bremsstrahlung. The agreement with the MD data
is improved, and important statistical characteristics of the model TCP, such
as the probability to find both electron and ion at one point, are determined.Comment: 25 pages, 6 figures, 5 tables. Published in Physical Review E
http://link.aps.org/abstract/PRE/v76/e02640
Multipartite pure-state entanglement and the generalized GHZ states
We show that not all 4-party pure states are GHZ reducible (i.e., can be
generated reversibly from a combination of 2-, 3- and 4-party maximally
entangled states by local quantum operations and classical communication
asymptotically) through an example, we also present some properties of the
relative entropy of entanglement for those 3-party pure states that are GHZ
reducible, and then we relate these properties to the additivity of the
relative entropy of entanglement.Comment: 7 pages, Revtex, type error correcte
Building multiparticle states with teleportation
We describe a protocol which can be used to generate any N-partite pure
quantum state using Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen (EPR) pairs. This protocol employs
only local operations and classical communication between the N parties
(N-LOCC). In particular, we rely on quantum data compression and teleportation
to create the desired state. This protocol can be used to obtain upper bounds
for the bipartite entanglement of formation of an arbitrary N-partite pure
state, in the asymptotic limit of many copies. We apply it to a few
multipartite states of interest, showing that in some cases it is not optimal.
Generalizations of the protocol are developed which are optimal for some of the
examples we consider, but which may still be inefficient for arbitrary states.Comment: 11 pages, 1 figure. Version 2 contains an example for which protocol
P3 is better than protocol P2. Correction to references in version
Conditional Quantum Dynamics and Logic Gates
Quantum logic gates provide fundamental examples of conditional quantum
dynamics. They could form the building blocks of general quantum information
processing systems which have recently been shown to have many interesting
non--classical properties. We describe a simple quantum logic gate, the quantum
controlled--NOT, and analyse some of its applications. We discuss two possible
physical realisations of the gate; one based on Ramsey atomic interferometry
and the other on the selective driving of optical resonances of two subsystems
undergoing a dipole--dipole interaction.Comment: 5 pages, RevTeX, two figures in a uuencoded, compressed fil
Faraday Instability in a Surface-Frozen Liquid
Faraday surface instability measurements of the critical acceleration, a_c,
and wavenumber, k_c, for standing surface waves on a tetracosanol (C_24H_50)
melt exhibit abrupt changes at T_s=54degC above the bulk freezing temperature.
The measured variations of a_c and k_c vs. temperature and driving frequency
are accounted for quantitatively by a hydrodynamic model, revealing a change
from a free-slip surface flow, generic for a free liquid surface (T>T_s), to a
surface-pinned, no-slip flow, characteristic of a flow near a wetted solid wall
(T < T_s). The change at T_s is traced to the onset of surface freezing, where
the steep velocity gradient in the surface-pinned flow significantly increases
the viscous dissipation near the surface.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures. Physical Review Letters (in press
Optimal estimation for Large-Eddy Simulation of turbulence and application to the analysis of subgrid models
The tools of optimal estimation are applied to the study of subgrid models
for Large-Eddy Simulation of turbulence. The concept of optimal estimator is
introduced and its properties are analyzed in the context of applications to a
priori tests of subgrid models. Attention is focused on the Cook and Riley
model in the case of a scalar field in isotropic turbulence. Using DNS data,
the relevance of the beta assumption is estimated by computing (i) generalized
optimal estimators and (ii) the error brought by this assumption alone. Optimal
estimators are computed for the subgrid variance using various sets of
variables and various techniques (histograms and neural networks). It is shown
that optimal estimators allow a thorough exploration of models. Neural networks
are proved to be relevant and very efficient in this framework, and further
usages are suggested
Entanglement splitting of pure bipartite quantum states
The concept of entanglement splitting is introduced by asking whether it is
possible for a party possessing half of a pure bipartite quantum state to
transfer some of his entanglement with the other party to a third party. We
describe the unitary local transformation for symmetric and isotropic splitting
of a singlet into two branches that leads to the highest entanglement of the
output. The capacity of the resulting quantum channels is discussed. Using the
same transformation for less than maximally entangled pure states, the
entanglement of the resulting states is found. We discuss whether they can be
used to do teleportation and to test the Bell inequality. Finally we generalize
to entanglement splitting into more than two branches.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, extended version, to be published in Phys. Rev.
NMR C-NOT gate through Aharanov-Anandan's phase shift
Recently, it is proposed to do quantum computation through the Berry's
phase(adiabatic cyclic geometric phase) shift with NMR (Jones et al, Nature,
403, 869(2000)). This geometric quantum gate is hopefully to be fault tolerant
to certain types of errors because of the geometric property of the Berry
phase. Here we give a scheme to realize the NMR C-NOT gate through
Aharonov-Anandan's phase(non-adiabatic cyclic phase) shift on the dynamic phase
free evolution loop.
In our scheme, the gate is run non-adiabatically, thus it is less affected by
the decoherence. And, in the scheme we have chosen the the zero dynamic phase
time evolution loop in obtaining the gepmetric phase shift, we need not take
any extra operation to cancel the dynamic phase.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figur
Quantum Nondemolition Monitoring of Universal Quantum Computers
The halt scheme for quantum Turing machines, originally proposed by Deutsch,
is reformulated precisely and is proved to work without spoiling the
computation. The ``conflict'' pointed out recently by Myers in the definition
of a universal quantum computer is shown to be only apparent. In the context of
quantum nondemolition (QND) measurement, it is also shown that the output
observable, an observable representing the output of the computation, is a QND
observable and that the halt scheme is equivalent to the QND monitoring of the
output observable.Comment: 5 pages, RevTeX, no figures, revised, to appear in Phys. Rev. Let
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