12,246 research outputs found

    The effect of temperature evolution on the interior structure of H2{}_{2}O-rich planets

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    For most planets in the range of radii from 1 to 4 R_{\oplus}, water is a major component of the interior composition. At high pressure H2{}_{2}O can be solid, but for larger planets, like Neptune, the temperature can be too high for this. Mass and age play a role in determining the transition between solid and fluid (and mixed) water-rich super-Earth. We use the latest high-pressure and ultra-high-pressure phase diagrams of H2{}_{2}O, and by comparing them with the interior adiabats of various planet models, the temperature evolution of the planet interior is shown, especially for the state of H2{}_{2}O. It turns out that the bulk of H2{}_{2}O in a planet's interior may exist in various states such as plasma, superionic, ionic, Ice VII, Ice X, etc., depending on the size, age and cooling rate of the planet. Different regions of the mass-radius phase space are also identified to correspond to different planet structures. In general, super-Earth-size planets (isolated or without significant parent star irradiation effects) older than about 3 Gyr would be mostly solid.Comment: Accepted by ApJ, in print for March 2014 (14 pages, 3 colored figures, 1 table

    On the performance of two protocols: SARG04 and BB84

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    We compare the performance of BB84 and SARG04, the later of which was proposed by V. Scarani et al., in Phys. Rev. Lett. 92, 057901 (2004). Specifically, in this paper, we investigate SARG04 with two-way classical communications and SARG04 with decoy states. In the first part of the paper, we show that SARG04 with two-way communications can tolerate a higher bit error rate (19.4% for a one-photon source and 6.56% for a two-photon source) than SARG04 with one-way communications (10.95% for a one-photon source and 2.71% for a two-photon source). Also, the upper bounds on the bit error rate for SARG04 with two-way communications are computed in a closed form by considering an individual attack based on a general measurement. In the second part of the paper, we propose employing the idea of decoy states in SARG04 to obtain unconditional security even when realistic devices are used. We compare the performance of SARG04 with decoy states and BB84 with decoy states. We find that the optimal mean-photon number for SARG04 is higher than that of BB84 when the bit error rate is small. Also, we observe that SARG04 does not achieve a longer secure distance and a higher key generation rate than BB84, assuming a typical experimental parameter set.Comment: 48 pages, 10 figures, 1 column, changed Figs. 7 and

    Higher rank numerical ranges of normal matrices

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    The higher rank numerical range is closely connected to the construction of quantum error correction code for a noisy quantum channel. It is known that if a normal matrix AMnA \in M_n has eigenvalues a1,.˙.,ana_1, \..., a_n, then its higher rank numerical range Λk(A)\Lambda_k(A) is the intersection of convex polygons with vertices aj1,.˙.,ajnk+1a_{j_1}, \..., a_{j_{n-k+1}}, where 1j1<.˙.<jnk+1n1 \le j_1 < \... < j_{n-k+1} \le n. In this paper, it is shown that the higher rank numerical range of a normal matrix with mm distinct eigenvalues can be written as the intersection of no more than max{m,4}\max\{m,4\} closed half planes. In addition, given a convex polygon P{\mathcal P} a construction is given for a normal matrix AMnA \in M_n with minimum nn such that Λk(A)=P\Lambda_k(A) = {\mathcal P}. In particular, if P{\mathcal P} has pp vertices, with p3p \ge 3, there is a normal matrix AMnA \in M_n with nmax{p+k1,2k+2}n \le \max\left\{p+k-1, 2k+2 \right\} such that Λk(A)=P\Lambda_k(A) = {\mathcal P}.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figures, to appear in SIAM Journal on Matrix Analysis and Application

    Security proof of a three-state quantum key distribution protocol without rotational symmetry

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    Standard security proofs of quantum key distribution (QKD) protocols often rely on symmetry arguments. In this paper, we prove the security of a three-state protocol that does not possess rotational symmetry. The three-state QKD protocol we consider involves three qubit states, where the first two states, |0_z> and |1_z>, can contribute to key generation and the third state, |+>=(|0_z>+|1_z>)/\sqrt{2}, is for channel estimation. This protocol has been proposed and implemented experimentally in some frequency-based QKD systems where the three states can be prepared easily. Thus, by founding on the security of this three-state protocol, we prove that these QKD schemes are, in fact, unconditionally secure against any attacks allowed by quantum mechanics. The main task in our proof is to upper bound the phase error rate of the qubits given the bit error rates observed. Unconditional security can then be proved not only for the ideal case of a single-photon source and perfect detectors, but also for the realistic case of a phase-randomized weak coherent light source and imperfect threshold detectors. Our result on the phase error rate upper bound is independent of the loss in the channel. Also, we compare the three-state protocol with the BB84 protocol. For the single-photon source case, our result proves that the BB84 protocol strictly tolerates a higher quantum bit error rate than the three-state protocol; while for the coherent-source case, the BB84 protocol achieves a higher key generation rate and secure distance than the three-state protocol when a decoy-state method is used.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, 2 column

    Field-dependent diamagnetic transition in magnetic superconductor Sm1.85Ce0.15CuO4ySm_{1.85} Ce_{0.15} Cu O_{4-y}

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    The magnetic penetration depth of single crystal Sm1.85Ce0.15CuO4y\rm{Sm_{1.85}Ce_{0.15}CuO_{4-y}} was measured down to 0.4 K in dc fields up to 7 kOe. For insulating Sm2CuO4\rm{Sm_2CuO_4}, Sm3+^{3+} spins order at the N\'{e}el temperature, TN=6T_N = 6 K, independent of the applied field. Superconducting Sm1.85Ce0.15CuO4y\rm{Sm_{1.85}Ce_{0.15}CuO_{4-y}} (Tc23T_c \approx 23 K) shows a sharp increase in diamagnetic screening below T(H)T^{\ast}(H) which varied from 4.0 K (H=0H = 0) to 0.5 K (H=H = 7 kOe) for a field along the c-axis. If the field was aligned parallel to the conducting planes, TT^{\ast} remained unchanged. The unusual field dependence of TT^{\ast} indicates a spin freezing transition that dramatically increases the superfluid density.Comment: 4 pages, RevTex
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