3,308 research outputs found
Tradeoffs for reliable quantum information storage in surface codes and color codes
The family of hyperbolic surface codes is one of the rare families of quantum
LDPC codes with non-zero rate and unbounded minimum distance. First, we
introduce a family of hyperbolic color codes. This produces a new family of
quantum LDPC codes with non-zero rate and with minimum distance logarithmic in
the blocklength. Second, we study the tradeoff between the length n, the number
of encoded qubits k and the distance d of surface codes and color codes. We
prove that kd^2 is upper bounded by C(log k)^2n, where C is a constant that
depends only on the row weight of the parity-check matrix. Our results prove
that the best asymptotic minimum distance of LDPC surface codes and color codes
with non-zero rate is logarithmic in the length.Comment: 10 page
Efficient color code decoders in dimensions from toric code decoders
We introduce an efficient decoder of the color code in dimensions,
the Restriction Decoder, which uses any -dimensional toric code decoder
combined with a local lifting procedure to find a recovery operation. We prove
that the Restriction Decoder successfully corrects errors in the color code if
and only if the corresponding toric code decoding succeeds. We also numerically
estimate the Restriction Decoder threshold for the color code in two and three
dimensions against the bit-filp and phase-flip noise with perfect syndrome
extraction. We report that the 2D color code threshold on the square-octagon lattice is on a par with the toric code threshold
on the square lattice.Comment: 28 pages, 8 figure
Upper Bounds on the Rate of Low Density Stabilizer Codes for the Quantum Erasure Channel
Using combinatorial arguments, we determine an upper bound on achievable
rates of stabilizer codes used over the quantum erasure channel. This allows us
to recover the no-cloning bound on the capacity of the quantum erasure channel,
R is below 1-2p, for stabilizer codes: we also derive an improved upper bound
of the form : R is below 1-2p-D(p) with a function D(p) that stays positive for
0 < p < 1/2 and for any family of stabilizer codes whose generators have
weights bounded from above by a constant - low density stabilizer codes.
We obtain an application to percolation theory for a family of self-dual
tilings of the hyperbolic plane. We associate a family of low density
stabilizer codes with appropriate finite quotients of these tilings. We then
relate the probability of percolation to the probability of a decoding error
for these codes on the quantum erasure channel. The application of our upper
bound on achievable rates of low density stabilizer codes gives rise to an
upper bound on the critical probability for these tilings.Comment: 32 page
A Construction of Quantum LDPC Codes from Cayley Graphs
We study a construction of Quantum LDPC codes proposed by MacKay, Mitchison
and Shokrollahi. It is based on the Cayley graph of Fn together with a set of
generators regarded as the columns of the parity-check matrix of a classical
code. We give a general lower bound on the minimum distance of the Quantum code
in where d is the minimum distance of the classical code.
When the classical code is the repetition code, we are able to
compute the exact parameters of the associated Quantum code which are .Comment: The material in this paper was presented in part at ISIT 2011. This
article is published in IEEE Transactions on Information Theory. We point out
that the second step of the proof of Proposition VI.2 in the published
version (Proposition 25 in the present version and Proposition 18 in the ISIT
extended abstract) is not strictly correct. This issue is addressed in the
present versio
The First Direct Measurements of Magnetic Fields on Very Low-Mass Stars
We present the first direct magnetic field measurements on M dwarfs cooler
than spectral class M4.5. Utilizing a new method based on the effects of a
field on the FeH band near 1 micron, we obtain information on whether the
integrated surface magnetic flux (Bf) is low (well under 1 kilogauss),
intermediate (between 1 and about 2.5 kG), or strong (greater than about 3 kG)
on a set of stars ranging from M2 down to M9. We also measure the rotational
broadening (vsini) and Halpha emission for more than 20 stars. Our goal is to
advance the understanding of how dynamo field production varies with stellar
parameters for very low-mass stars, how the field and emission activity are
related, and whether there is a connection between the rotation and magnetic
flux. We find that fields are produced throughout the M-dwarfs. Among the early
M stars we have too few targets to yield conclusive results. In the mid-M
stars, there is a clear connection between slow rotation and weak fields. In
the late-M stars, rotation is always measureable, and the strongest fields go
with the most rapid rotators. These very cool rapid rotators have the largest
magnetic flux in the whole sample. Halpha emission is found to be a good
general proxy for magnetic fields. The drop-off in fractional emission near the
bottom of the main sequence is not accompanied by a drop-off in magnetic flux,
lending credence to the hypothesis that it is due to atmospheric coupling to
the field rather than changes in the field itself. It is clear that the
methodology we have developed can be further applied to discover more about the
behavior of magnetic dynamos and magnetic activity in cool and fully convective
objects.Comment: 33 pages, accepted by ApJ, abstract abbreviated for astro-p
The Galactic disk mass function: reconciliation of the HST and nearby determinations
We derive and parametrize the Galactic mass function (MF) below 1 \msol
characteristic of both single objects and binary systems. We resolve the long
standing discrepancy between the MFs derived from the HST and from the nearby
luminosity functions, respectively. We show that this discrepancy stemmed from
{\it two} cumulative effects, namely (i) incorrect color-magnitude determined
distances, due a substantial fraction of M dwarfs in the HST sample belonging
to the metal-depleted, thick-disk population, as corrected recently by Zheng et
al. and (ii) unresolved binaries. We show that both the nearby and HST MF for
unresolved systems are consistent with a fraction 50% of M-dwarf
binaries, with the mass of both the primaries and the companions originating
from the same underlying single MF. This implies that 30% of M dwarfs
should have an M dwarf companion and 20% should have a brown dwarf
companion, in agreement with recent determinations. The present calculations
show that the so-called "brown-dwarf desert" should be reinterpreted as a lack
of high mass-ratio (m_2/m_1\la 0.1) systems, and does not preclude a
substantial fraction of brown dwarfs as companions of M dwarfs or for other
brown dwarfs.Comment: 16 pages, Latex file, uses aasms4.sty, to appear in ApJ Letter
Determination of jet fuel thermal deposit rate using a modified JFTOT
Three fuels having different breakpoint temperatures were studied in the modified jet fuel thermal oxidation tester. The lower stability fuel with a breakpoint of 240 C was first stressed at a constant temperature. After repeating this procedure at several different temperatures, an Arrehenius plot was drawn from the data. The correlation coefficient and the energy of activation were calculated to be 0.97 and 8 kcal/mole respectively. Two other fuels having breakpoint temperatures of 271 C and 285 C were also studied in a similar manner. A straight line was drawn through the data at a slope equivalent to the slope of the lower stability fuel. The deposit formation rates for the three fuels were determined at 260 C, and a relative deposit formation rate at this temperature was calculated and plotted as a function of the individual fuel's breakpoint temperatures
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