3,448 research outputs found
Strong Cosmic Censorship in Charged de Sitter spacetime with Scalar Field Non-minimally Coupled to Curvature
We examine the stability and the strong cosmic censorship in the
Reissner-Nordstrom-de Sitter (RN-dS) black hole by investigating the evolution
of a scalar field non-minimally coupled to the curvature. We find that when the
coupling parameter is negative, the RN-dS black hole experiences instability.
The instability disappears when the coupling parameter becomes non-negative.
With the increase of the coupling parameter, the violation of the strong cosmic
censorship occurs at a larger critical charge ratio. But such an increase of
the critical charge is suppressed by the increase of the cosmological constant.
Different from the minimal coupling situation, it is possible to accommodate
in the near extremal black hole when the scalar field is
non-minimally coupled to curvature. The increase of the cosmological constant
can allow to be satisfied for even smaller value of the coupling
parameter. The existence of implies that the resulting curvature
can continuously cross the Cauchy horizon.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figures, 5 table
Bis{2-methoxy-6-[(4-methylphenyl)iminiomethyl]phenolato-κ2 O 1,O 2}tris(nitrato-κ2 O,O′)methanolsamarium(III)
The asymmetric unit of the title compound, [Sm(NO3)3(C15H15NO2)2(CH3OH)], contains two Schiff base 2-methoxy-6-[(4-methylphenyl)iminiomethyl]phenolate (HL) ligands, three nitrate ions and one methanol molecule that binds to the nine-coordinate samarium(III) ion via its O atoms. The HL ligands chelate with a strong Sm—O(deprotonated phenolic) bond and a weak Sm—O(methoxy) contact. The latter can be interpreted as the apices of the bicapped square-antiprismatic SmIIIO9 polyhedron. The Schiff base ligands are in a zwitterionic state with the phenolic H atom transferred to the imine N atom. O—H⋯O, O—H⋯N and N—H⋯O hydrogen bonds lend stability to the structure. One O atom of one nitrate group is equally disordered over two positions
Building quantum neural networks based on swap test
Artificial neural network, consisting of many neurons in different layers, is
an important method to simulate humain brain. Usually, one neuron has two
operations: one is linear, the other is nonlinear. The linear operation is
inner product and the nonlinear operation is represented by an activation
function. In this work, we introduce a kind of quantum neuron whose inputs and
outputs are quantum states. The inner product and activation operator of the
quantum neurons can be realized by quantum circuits. Based on the quantum
neuron, we propose a model of quantum neural network in which the weights
between neurons are all quantum states. We also construct a quantum circuit to
realize this quantum neural network model. A learning algorithm is proposed
meanwhile. We show the validity of learning algorithm theoretically and
demonstrate the potential of the quantum neural network numerically.Comment: 10 pages, 13 figure
Reevaluation of the density dependence of nucleon radius and mass in the global color symmetry model of QCD
With the global color symmetry model (GCM) at finite chemical potential, the
density dependence of the bag constant, the total energy and the radius of a
nucleon in nuclear matter is investigated. A relation between the nuclear
matter density and the chemical potential with the action of QCD being taken
into account is obtained. A maximal nuclear matter density for the existence of
the bag with three quarks confined within is given. The calculated results
indicate that, before the maximal density is reached, the bag constant and the
total energy of a nucleon decrease, and the radius of a nucleon increases
slowly, with the increasing of the nuclear matter density. As the maximal
nuclear matter density is reached, the mass of the nucleon vanishes and the
radius becomes infinite suddenly. It manifests that a phase transition from
nucleons to quarks takes place.Comment: 18 pages, 3 figure
Bis{[6-methoxy-2-(4-methylphenyl)iminiomethyl]phenolate-κ2 O,O′}tris(nitrato-κ2 O,O′)europium(III)
The crystal structure of title compound, [Eu(NO3)3(C15H15NO2)2], contains two Schiff base 6-methoxy-2-[(4-methylphenyl)iminomethyl]phenolate (L) ligands and three independent nitrate ions that chelate to the europium(III) ion via the O atoms. The coordination number of the EuIII ion is ten. The L ligands chelate with a strong Eu—O(deprotonated phenolate) bond and a weak Eu—O(methoxy) contact, the latter can be interpreted as the apices of the bicapped square-antiprismatic EuIII polyhedron. Intramolecular N—H⋯O hydrogen bonds occur
Security proof of differential phase shift quantum key distribution in the noiseless case
Differential phase shift quantum key distribution systems have a high
potential for achieving high speed key generation. However, its unconditional
security proof is still missing, even though it has been proposed for many
years. Here, we prove its security against collective attacks with a weak
coherent light source in the noiseless case (i.e. no bit error). The only
assumptions are that quantum theory is correct, the devices are perfect and
trusted and the key size is infinite. Our proof works on threshold detectors.
We compute the lower bound of the secret key generation rate using the
information-theoretical security proof method. Our final result shows that the
lower bound of the secret key generation rate per pulse is linearly
proportional to the channel transmission probability if Bob's detection counts
obey the binomial distribution.Comment: Published version, 13 pages, 4 figures, minor changes, references
added, acknowledgement adde
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