114 research outputs found
Closure Duration in the Classification of Stops: A statistical analysis
This study was supported by grants from the Harvard-Yenching Institute and the National Science Foundation (#INT-8314687)
Collective spin systems in dispersive optical cavity QED: Quantum phase transitions and entanglement
We propose a cavity QED setup which implements a dissipative
Lipkin-Meshkov-Glick model -- an interacting collective spin system. By varying
the external model parameters the system can be made to undergo both first-and
second-order quantum phase transitions, which are signified by dramatic changes
in cavity output field properties, such as the probe laser transmission
spectrum. The steady-state entanglement between pairs of atoms is shown to peak
at the critical points and can be experimentally determined by suitable
measurements on the cavity output field. The entanglement dynamics also
exhibits pronounced variations in the vicinities of the phase transitions.Comment: 19 pages, 18 figures, shortened versio
Entanglement and bifurcations in Jahn-Teller models
We compare and contrast the entanglement in the ground state of two
Jahn-Teller models. The system models the coupling of a
two-level electronic system, or qubit, to a single oscillator mode, while the
models the qubit coupled to two independent, degenerate
oscillator modes. In the absence of a transverse magnetic field applied to the
qubit, both systems exhibit a degenerate ground state. Whereas there always
exists a completely separable ground state in the system, the
ground states of the model always exhibit entanglement. For
the case we aim to clarify results from previous work, alluding
to a link between the ground state entanglement characteristics and a
bifurcation of a fixed point in the classical analogue. In the
case we make use of an ansatz for the ground state. We
compare this ansatz to exact numerical calculations and use it to investigate
how the entanglement is shared between the three system degrees of freedom.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figures, comments welcome; 2 references adde
Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen paradox without entanglement
We claim that the nonlocality without entanglement revealed quite recently by
Bennett {\it et al.} [quant-ph/9804053] should be rather interpreted as {\it
Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen paradox without entanglement}. It would be true
nonlocality without entanglement if one knew that quantum mechnics provides the
best possible means for extracting information from physical system i.e. that
it is ``operationally complete''.Comment: RevTeX, 2 page
Interference in dielectrics and pseudo-measurements
Inserting a lossy dielectric into one arm of an interference experiment acts
in many ways like a measurement. If two entangled photons are passed through
the interferometer, a certain amount of information is gained about which path
they took, and the interference pattern in a coincidence count measurement is
suppressed. However, by inserting a second dielectric into the other arm of the
interferometer, one can restore the interference pattern. Two of these
pseudo-measurements can thus cancel each other out. This is somewhat analogous
to the proposed quantum eraser experiments.Comment: 7 pages RevTeX 3.0 + 2 figures (postscript). Submitted to Phys. Rev.
On 1-qubit channels
The entropy H_T(rho) of a state rho with respect to a channel T and the
Holevo capacity of the channel require the solution of difficult variational
problems. For a class of 1-qubit channels, which contains all the extremal
ones, the problem can be significantly simplified by associating an Hermitian
antilinear operator theta to every channel of the considered class. The
concurrence of the channel can be expressed by theta and turns out to be a flat
roof. This allows to write down an explicit expression for H_T. Its maximum
would give the Holevo (1-shot) capacity.Comment: 12 pages, several printing or latex errors correcte
Bell's Theorem from Moore's Theorem
It is shown that the restrictions of what can be inferred from
classically-recorded observational outcomes that are imposed by the no-cloning
theorem, the Kochen-Specker theorem and Bell's theorem also follow from
restrictions on inferences from observations formulated within classical
automata theory. Similarities between the assumptions underlying classical
automata theory and those underlying universally-unitary quantum theory are
discussed.Comment: 12 pages; to appear in Int. J. General System
Classical Structures Based on Unitaries
Starting from the observation that distinct notions of copying have arisen in
different categorical fields (logic and computation, contrasted with quantum
mechanics) this paper addresses the question of when, or whether, they may
coincide. Provided all definitions are strict in the categorical sense, we show
that this can never be the case. However, allowing for the defining axioms to
be taken up to canonical isomorphism, a close connection between the classical
structures of categorical quantum mechanics, and the categorical property of
self-similarity familiar from logical and computational models becomes
apparent.
The required canonical isomorphisms are non-trivial, and mix both typed
(multi-object) and untyped (single-object) tensors and structural isomorphisms;
we give coherence results that justify this approach.
We then give a class of examples where distinct self-similar structures at an
object determine distinct matrix representations of arrows, in the same way as
classical structures determine matrix representations in Hilbert space. We also
give analogues of familiar notions from linear algebra in this setting such as
changes of basis, and diagonalisation.Comment: 24 pages,7 diagram
Quantum uniqueness
In the classical world one can construct two identical systems which have
identical behavior and give identical measurement results. We show this to be
impossible in the quantum domain. We prove that after the same quantum
measurement two different quantum systems cannot yield always identical
results, provided the possible measurement results belong to a non orthogonal
set. This is interpreted as quantum uniqueness - a quantum feature which has no
classical analog. Its tight relation with objective randomness of quantum
measurements is discussed.Comment: Presented at 4th Feynman festival, June 22-26, 2009, in Olomouc,
Czech Republic
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