4,628 research outputs found
Developing the Deutsch-Hayden approach to quantum mechanics
The formalism of Deutsch and Hayden is a useful tool for describing quantum
mechanics explicitly as local and unitary, and therefore quantum information
theory as concerning a "flow" of information between systems. In this paper we
show that these physical descriptions of flow are unique, and develop the
approach further to include the measurement interaction and mixed states. We
then give an analysis of entanglement swapping in this approach, showing that
it does not in fact contain non-local effects or some form of superluminal
signalling.Comment: 14 pages. Added section on entanglement swappin
Entanglement without nonlocality
We consider the characterization of entanglement from the perspective of a
Heisenberg formalism. We derive an original two-party generalized separability
criteria, and from this describe a novel physical understanding of
entanglement. We find that entanglement may be considered as fundamentally a
local effect, and therefore as a separable computational resource from
nonlocality. We show how entanglement differs from correlation physically, and
explore the implications of this new conception of entanglement for the notion
of classicality. We find that this understanding of entanglement extends
naturally to multipartite cases.Comment: 9 pages. Expanded introduction and sections on physical entanglement
and localit
Dispersal Dynamics in a Wind-Driven Benthic System
Bedload and water column traps were used with simultaneous wind and water velocity measurements to study postlarval macrofaunal dispersal dynamics in Manukau Harbour, New Zealand. A 12-fold range in mean wind condition resulted in large differences in water flow (12-fold), sediment flux (285-fold), and trap collection of total number of individuals (95-fold), number of the dominant infaunal organism (84-fold for the bivalve Macomona liliana), and number of species (4-fold). There were very strong, positive relationships among wind condition, water velocity, sediment flux, and postlarval dispersal, especially in the bedload. Local density in the ambient sediment was not a good predictor of dispersal. Results indicate that postlarval dispersal may influence benthic abundance pat- terns over a range of spatial scales
What e-patients want from the doctor-patient relationship: content analysis of posts on discussion boards.
People with long-term conditions are encouraged to take control and ownership of managing their condition. Interactions between health care staff and patients become partnerships with sharing of expertise. This has changed the doctor-patient relationship and the division of roles and responsibilities that traditionally existed, but what each party expects from the other may not always be clear. Information that people with long-term conditions share on Internet discussion boards can provide useful insights into their expectations of health care staff. This paper reports on a small study about the expectations that people with a long-term condition (diabetes) have of their doctors using information gleaned from Internet discussion boards
Abstract Poisson summation formulas over homogeneous spaces of compact groups
This paper presents the abstract notion of Poisson summation formulas for homogeneous spaces of compact groups. Let G be a compact group, H be a closed subgroup of G, and μ be the normalized G-invariant measure over the left coset space G / H associated to the Weil’s formula. We prove that the abstract Fourier transform over G / H satisfies a generalized version of the Poisson summation formula
On the evolution of a large class of inhomogeneous scalar field cosmologies
The asymptotic behaviour of a family of inhomogeneous scalar field
cosmologies with exponential potential is studied. By introducing new variables
we can perform an almost complete analysis of the evolution of these
cosmologies. Unlike the homogeneous case (Bianchi type solutions), when k^2<2
the models do not isotropize due to the presence of the inhomogeneitiesComment: 23 pages, 1 figure. Submitted to Classical and Quantum Gravit
A Survey for Transient Astronomical Radio Emission at 611 MHz
We have constructed and operated the Survey for Transient Astronomical Radio
Emission (STARE) to detect transient astronomical radio emission at 611 MHz
originating from the sky over the northeastern United States. The system is
sensitive to transient events on timescales of 0.125 s to a few minutes, with a
typical zenith flux density detection threshold of approximately 27 kJy. During
18 months of around-the-clock observing with three geographically separated
instruments, we detected a total of 4,318,486 radio bursts. 99.9% of these
events were rejected as locally generated interference, determined by requiring
the simultaneous observation of an event at all three sites for it to be
identified as having an astronomical origin. The remaining 3,898 events have
been found to be associated with 99 solar radio bursts. These results
demonstrate the remarkably effective RFI rejection achieved by a coincidence
technique using precision timing (such as GPS clocks) at geographically
separated sites. The non-detection of extra-solar bursting or flaring radio
sources has improved the flux density sensitivity and timescale sensitivity
limits set by several similar experiments in the 1970s. We discuss the
consequences of these limits for the immediate solar neighborhood and the
discovery of previously unknown classes of sources. We also discuss other
possible uses for the large collection of 611 MHz monitoring data assembled by
STARE.Comment: 24 pages, 6 figures; to appear in PAS
The Effect of Fluorine on Blood and Respiration
Much interest has been manifested in fluorine during the past few years. This is due to two reasons: first, fluorine is found in several phosphatic mineral supplements, which are fed to farm animals ; and, second, fluorine has been found in drinking waters in this and many other countries of the world. The interest of the authors in fluorine dates from the discovery by Ostrem, Nelson, Greenwood, and Wilhelm of fluorine in the drinking waters of communities in the State of Iowa, with the resulting production of mottled enamel of the teeth. There can be no question that fluorine in excessive amounts in water causes damage to the teeth. Smith, Lantz, and Smith have produced considerable evidence that the presence of excessive fluorine in the drinking water will cause mottled enamel in man. The question naturally arises as to whether fluorine in water produces other harmful effects or pathological changes in the body, aside from the disturbance to the teeth
A dynamical systems approach to the tilted Bianchi models of solvable type
We use a dynamical systems approach to analyse the tilting spatially
homogeneous Bianchi models of solvable type (e.g., types VI and VII)
with a perfect fluid and a linear barotropic -law equation of state. In
particular, we study the late-time behaviour of tilted Bianchi models, with an
emphasis on the existence of equilibrium points and their stability properties.
We briefly discuss the tilting Bianchi type V models and the late-time
asymptotic behaviour of irrotational Bianchi VII models. We prove the
important result that for non-inflationary Bianchi type VII models vacuum
plane-wave solutions are the only future attracting equilibrium points in the
Bianchi type VII invariant set. We then investigate the dynamics close to
the plane-wave solutions in more detail, and discover some new features that
arise in the dynamical behaviour of Bianchi cosmologies with the inclusion of
tilt. We point out that in a tiny open set of parameter space in the type IV
model (the loophole) there exists closed curves which act as attracting limit
cycles. More interestingly, in the Bianchi type VII models there is a
bifurcation in which a set of equilibrium points turn into closed orbits. There
is a region in which both sets of closed curves coexist, and it appears that
for the type VII models in this region the solution curves approach a
compact surface which is topologically a torus.Comment: 29 page
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