109,106 research outputs found
SOCIAL CHANGE IN AMERICAN UNIVERSITIES
Teaching/Communication/Extension/Profession,
When a quantum measurement can be implemented locally ... and when it cannot
Local operations on subsystems and classical communication between parties
(LOCC) constitute the most general protocols available on spatially separated
quantum systems. Every LOCC protocol implements a separable generalized
measurement -- a complete measurement for which every outcome corresponds to a
tensor product of operators on individual subsystems -- but it is known that
there exist separable measurements that cannot be implemented by LOCC. A
longstanding problem in quantum information theory is to understand the
difference between LOCC and the full set of separable measurements. In this
paper, we show how to construct an LOCC protocol to implement an arbitrary
separable measurement, except that with those measurements for which no LOCC
protocol exists, the method shows explicitly that this is the case.Comment: 21 pages, 7 figures. Extensively revised to include details of all
arguments, explicitly proving all results in full rigor. Version 3 has
sections reordered and other restructuring, but otherwise contains the same
discussion as version
Method and apparatus for stable silicon dioxide layers on silicon grown in silicon nitride ambient
A method and apparatus for thermally growing stable silicon dioxide layers on silicon is disclosed. A previously etched and baked silicon nitride tube placed in a furnace is used to grow the silicon dioxide. First, pure oxygen is allowed to flow through the tube to initially coat the inside surface of the tube with a thin layer of silicon dioxide. After the tube is coated with the thin layer of silicon dioxide, the silicon is oxidized thermally in a normal fashion. If the tube becomes contaminated, the silicon dioxide is etched off thereby exposing clean silicon nitride and then the inside of the tube is recoated with silicon dioxide. As is disclosed, the silicon nitride tube can also be used as the ambient for the pyrolytic decomposition of silane and ammonia to form thin layers of clean silicon nitride
Chen ranks and resonance
The Chen groups of a group are the lower central series quotients of the
maximal metabelian quotient of . Under certain conditions, we relate the
ranks of the Chen groups to the first resonance variety of , a jump locus
for the cohomology of . In the case where is the fundamental group of
the complement of a complex hyperplane arrangement, our results positively
resolve Suciu's Chen ranks conjecture. We obtain explicit formulas for the Chen
ranks of a number of groups of broad interest, including pure Artin groups
associated to Coxeter groups, and the group of basis-conjugating automorphisms
of a finitely generated free group.Comment: final version, to appear in Advances in Mathematic
Pressure suppression of electron correlation in the collapsed tetragonal phase of CaFe2As2: A DFT-DMFT investigation
Recent studies reveal a pressure induced transition from a paramagnetic tetragonal phase (T) to a collapsed tetragonal phase (CT) in CaFe2As2, which was found to be superconducting with pressure at low temperature. We have investigated the effects of electron correlation and a local fluctuating moment in both tetragonal and collapsed tetragonal phases of the paramagnetic CaFe2As2 using self-consistent DFT-DMFT with continuous time quantum Monte Carlo as the impurity solver. From the computed optical conductivity, we find a gain in the optical kinetic energy due to the loss in Hund's rule coupling energy in the CT phase. We find that the transition from T to CT turns CaFe2As2 from a bad metal into a good metal. Computed mass enhancement and local moments also show a significant decrease in the CT phase, which confirms the suppression of the electron correlation in the CT phase of CaFe2As2
Phase Transitions in the NMSSM
We study phase transitions in the Next-to-Minimal Supersymmetric Standard
Model (NMSSM) with the weak scale vacuum expectation values of the singlet
scalar, constrained by Higgs spectrum and vacuum stability. We find four
different types of phase transitions, three of which have two-stage nature. In
particular, one of the two-stage transitions admits strongly first order
electroweak phase transition, even with heavy squarks. We introduce a
tree-level explicit CP violation in the Higgs sector, which does not affect the
neutron electric dipole moment. In contrast to the MSSM with the CP violation
in the squark sector, a strongly first order phase transition is not so
weakened by this CP violation.Comment: 21 pages, 8 figure
Asymptotically Unambitious Artificial General Intelligence
General intelligence, the ability to solve arbitrary solvable problems, is
supposed by many to be artificially constructible. Narrow intelligence, the
ability to solve a given particularly difficult problem, has seen impressive
recent development. Notable examples include self-driving cars, Go engines,
image classifiers, and translators. Artificial General Intelligence (AGI)
presents dangers that narrow intelligence does not: if something smarter than
us across every domain were indifferent to our concerns, it would be an
existential threat to humanity, just as we threaten many species despite no ill
will. Even the theory of how to maintain the alignment of an AGI's goals with
our own has proven highly elusive. We present the first algorithm we are aware
of for asymptotically unambitious AGI, where "unambitiousness" includes not
seeking arbitrary power. Thus, we identify an exception to the Instrumental
Convergence Thesis, which is roughly that by default, an AGI would seek power,
including over us.Comment: 9 pages with 5 figures; 10 page Appendix with 2 figure
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