13,480 research outputs found
Observation of Bell Inequality violation in B mesons
A pair of mesons from decay exhibit EPR type
non-local particle-antiparticle (flavor) correlation. It is possible to write
down Bell Inequality (in the CHSH form: ) to test the non-locality
assumption of EPR. Using semileptonic decays of at Belle
experiment, a clear violation of Bell Inequality in particle-antiparticle
correlation is observed:
S=2.725+-0.167(stat)+-0.092(syst)Comment: Conference Proceeding for Garda Lake Workshop 2003 "Mysteries,
Puzzles and Paradoxes in Quantum Mechanics
Properties of the one-dimensional Hubbard model: cellular dynamical mean-field description
The one-dimensional half-filled Hubbard model is considered at zero
temperature within the cellular dynamical mean-field theory (CDMFT). By the
computation of the spectral gap and the energy density with various cluster and
bath sizes we examine the accuracy of the CDMFT in a systematic way, which
proves the accurate description of the one-dimensional systems by the CDMFT
with small clusters. We also calculate the spectral weights in a full range of
the momentum for various interaction strengths. The results do not only account
for the spin-charge separation, but they also reproduce all the features of the
Bethe ansatz dispersions, implying that the CDMFT provides an excellent
description of the spectral properties of low-dimensional interacting systems.Comment: J. Phys.: Condens. Matter, in pres
Generation of bipartite spin entanglement via spin-independent scattering
We consider the bipartite spin entanglement between two identical fermions
generated in spin-independent scattering. We show how the spatial degrees of
freedom act as ancillas for the creation of entanglement to a degree that
depends on the scattering angle, . The number of Slater determinants
generated in the process is greater than 1, corresponding to genuine quantum
correlations between the identical fermions. The maximal entanglement
attainable of 1 ebit is reached at . We also analyze a simple
dependent Bell's inequality, which is violated for
. This phenomenon is unrelated to the symmetrization
postulate but does not appear for unequal particles.Comment: 5 pages and 3 figures. Accepted in PR
Bell inequality violation with two remote atomic qubits
We observe violation of a Bell inequality between the quantum states of two
remote Yb ions separated by a distance of about one meter with the detection
loophole closed. The heralded entanglement of two ions is established via
interference and joint detection of two emitted photons, whose polarization is
entangled with each ion. The entanglement of remote qubits is also
characterized by full quantum state tomography.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Premature discharge of children from hospital admission at Ahmadu Bello University Teaching Hospital Zaria: A 3-year review
Introduction: Leaving hospital care prematurely could threaten the healthy survival of and expose children to a risk of harmful alternatives. It is also a concern and a challenge to healthcare providers and the health system. A better understanding of its characteristic could help mitigate the impact on children.Objective: To determine the prevalence, types of, and reasons for premature hospital discharge amongst children.Methods: We carried out a threeyear retrospective review of case notes of children who were taken away from hospital admission by their parents/caregivers before they were due for discharge. Socio-demographic, clinical anddischarge information were collected and data was entered into Microsoft® Excel® for Mac 2011 (Version 14.1.0), cleaned and analysed. Results were presented as percentages, statistical means and standard deviations, tables and charts.Results: There were 56 cases of premature discharge out of 2858 admissions, giving a prevalence of 2.0%. Under-five children constituted 65.4%, with a male: female ratio of 2.3:1. Thirty-one (55.3%) children were absconded with while 25 (44.7%) were taken away by caregivers against medical advice. The commonest diagnoses were protein-energy malnutrition and pneumonia and majority were from poor socio-economic family background. The commonest reasons for discharge AMA were unaffordable costs and perception of improvement of child’s medical condition.Conclusion: Socio-economic factors were significant determinants of utilization of in-patient hospital services for the children studied. There is a need for provision of affordable health care as well as efficient discharge policy to protect children from potential risks associated with premature hospital discharge.Keywords: Children; admission; premature discharge; discharge against medical advice; absconding; elopemen
SGR 0418+5729: a low-magnetic-field magnetar
Soft gamma-ray repeaters and anomalous X-ray pulsars are a small (but
growing) group of X-ray sources characterized by the emission of short bursts
and by a large variability in their persistent flux. They are believed to be
magnetars, i.e. neutron stars powered by extreme magnetic fields 1E14-1E15 G).
We found evidence for a magnetar with a low magnetic field, SGR 0418+5729,
recently detected after it emitted bursts similar to those of soft gamma-ray
repeaters. New X-ray observations show that its dipolar magnetic field cannot
be greater than 8E12 G, well in the range of ordinary radio pulsars, implying
that a high surface dipolar magnetic field is not necessarily required for
magnetar-like activity. The magnetar population may thus include objects with a
wider range of magnetic-field strengths, ages and evolutionary stages than
observed so far.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures; to appear in the Proceedings of the Pulsar
Conference 2010, Chia, Sardinia (Italy), 10-15 October 201
Noisy Monte Carlo: Convergence of Markov chains with approximate transition kernels
Monte Carlo algorithms often aim to draw from a distribution by
simulating a Markov chain with transition kernel such that is
invariant under . However, there are many situations for which it is
impractical or impossible to draw from the transition kernel . For instance,
this is the case with massive datasets, where is it prohibitively expensive to
calculate the likelihood and is also the case for intractable likelihood models
arising from, for example, Gibbs random fields, such as those found in spatial
statistics and network analysis. A natural approach in these cases is to
replace by an approximation . Using theory from the stability of
Markov chains we explore a variety of situations where it is possible to
quantify how 'close' the chain given by the transition kernel is to
the chain given by . We apply these results to several examples from spatial
statistics and network analysis.Comment: This version: results extended to non-uniformly ergodic Markov chain
Sampling constrained probability distributions using Spherical Augmentation
Statistical models with constrained probability distributions are abundant in
machine learning. Some examples include regression models with norm constraints
(e.g., Lasso), probit, many copula models, and latent Dirichlet allocation
(LDA). Bayesian inference involving probability distributions confined to
constrained domains could be quite challenging for commonly used sampling
algorithms. In this paper, we propose a novel augmentation technique that
handles a wide range of constraints by mapping the constrained domain to a
sphere in the augmented space. By moving freely on the surface of this sphere,
sampling algorithms handle constraints implicitly and generate proposals that
remain within boundaries when mapped back to the original space. Our proposed
method, called {Spherical Augmentation}, provides a mathematically natural and
computationally efficient framework for sampling from constrained probability
distributions. We show the advantages of our method over state-of-the-art
sampling algorithms, such as exact Hamiltonian Monte Carlo, using several
examples including truncated Gaussian distributions, Bayesian Lasso, Bayesian
bridge regression, reconstruction of quantized stationary Gaussian process, and
LDA for topic modeling.Comment: 41 pages, 13 figure
Unstable particles as open quantum systems
We present the probability preserving description of the decaying particle
within the framework of quantum mechanics of open systems taking into account
the superselection rule prohibiting the superposition of the particle and
vacuum. In our approach the evolution of the system is given by a family of
completely positive trace preserving maps forming one-parameter dynamical
semigroup. We give the Kraus representation for the general evolution of such
systems which allows one to write the evolution for systems with two or more
particles. Moreover, we show that the decay of the particle can be regarded as
a Markov process by finding explicitly the master equation in the Lindblad
form. We also show that there are remarkable restrictions on the possible
strength of decoherence.Comment: 11 pp, 2 figs (published version
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