2,174 research outputs found
Mutually unbiased bases in dimension six: The four most distant bases
We consider the average distance between four bases in dimension six. The
distance between two orthonormal bases vanishes when the bases are the same,
and the distance reaches its maximal value of unity when the bases are
unbiased. We perform a numerical search for the maximum average distance and
find it to be strictly smaller than unity. This is strong evidence that no four
mutually unbiased bases exist in dimension six. We also provide a two-parameter
family of three bases which, together with the canonical basis, reach the
numerically-found maximum of the average distance, and we conduct a detailed
study of the structure of the extremal set of bases.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figures, 1 tabl
Guiding center model to interpret neutral particle analyzer results
The theoretical model is discussed, which accounts for drift and cyclotron components of ion motion in a partially ionized plasma. Density and velocity distributions are systematically precribed. The flux into the neutral particle analyzer (NPA) from this plasma is determined by summing over all charge exchange neutrals in phase space which are directed into apertures. Especially detailed data, obtained by sweeping the line of sight of the apertures across the plasma of the NASA Lewis HIP-1 burnout device, are presented. Selection of randomized cyclotron velocity distributions about mean azimuthal drift yield energy distributions which compared well with experiment. Use of data obtained with a bending magnet on the NPA showed that separation between energy distribution curves of various mass species correlate well with a drift divided by mean cyclotron energy parameter of the theory. Use of the guiding center model in conjunction with NPA scans across the plasma aid in estimates of ion density and E field variation with plasma radius
Raw-data attacks in quantum cryptography with partial tomography
We consider a variant of the BB84 protocol for quantum cryptography, the
prototype of tomographically incomplete protocols, where the key is generated
by one-way communication rather than the usual two-way communication. Our
analysis, backed by numerical evidence, establishes thresholds for
eavesdropping attacks on the raw data and on the generated key at quantum bit
error rates of 10% and 6.15%, respectively. Both thresholds are lower than the
threshold for unconditional security in the standard BB84 protocol.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figure
Abrupt and gradual changes of information through the Kane solid state computer
The susceptibility of the transformed information to the filed and system
parameters is investigated for the Kane solid state computer. It has been
shown, that the field polarization and the initial state of the system play the
central roles on the abrupt and gradual quench of the purity and the fidelity.
If the field and the initial state are in different polarizations, then the
purity and the fidelity decrease abruptly, while for the common polarization
the decay is gradual and smooth. For some class of initial states one can send
the information without any loss. Therefore, by controlling on the devices one
can increase the time of safe communication, reduce the amount of exchange
information between the state and its environment and minimize the purity
decrease rate
Purification and correlated measurements of bipartite mixed states
We prove that all purifications of a non-factorable state (i.e., the state
which cannot be expressed in a form ) are
entangled. We also show that for any bipartite state there exists a pair of
measurements which are correlated on this state if and only if the state is
non-factorable.Comment: 4 revtex pages, to appear in Phys. Rev.
E10 and SO(9,9) invariant supergravity
We show that (massive) D=10 type IIA supergravity possesses a hidden rigid
SO(9,9) symmetry and a hidden local SO(9) x SO(9) symmetry upon dimensional
reduction to one (time-like) dimension. We explicitly construct the associated
locally supersymmetric Lagrangian in one dimension, and show that its bosonic
sector, including the mass term, can be equivalently described by a truncation
of an E10/K(E10) non-linear sigma-model to the level \ell<=2 sector in a
decomposition of E10 under its so(9,9) subalgebra. This decomposition is
presented up to level 10, and the even and odd level sectors are identified
tentatively with the Neveu--Schwarz and Ramond sectors, respectively. Further
truncation to the level \ell=0 sector yields a model related to the reduction
of D=10 type I supergravity. The hyperbolic Kac--Moody algebra DE10, associated
to the latter, is shown to be a proper subalgebra of E10, in accord with the
embedding of type I into type IIA supergravity. The corresponding decomposition
of DE10 under so(9,9) is presented up to level 5.Comment: 1+39 pages LaTeX2e, 2 figures, 2 tables, extended tables obtainable
by downloading sourc
The density matrix in the de Broglie-Bohm approach
If the density matrix is treated as an objective description of individual
systems, it may become possible to attribute the same objective significance to
statistical mechanical properties, such as entropy or temperature, as to
properties such as mass or energy. It is shown that the de Broglie-Bohm
interpretation of quantum theory can be consistently applied to density
matrices as a description of individual systems. The resultant trajectories are
examined for the case of the delayed choice interferometer, for which Bell
appears to suggest that such an interpretation is not possible. Bell's argument
is shown to be based upon a different understanding of the density matrix to
that proposed here.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figure
Periodic and discrete Zak bases
Weyl's displacement operators for position and momentum commute if the
product of the elementary displacements equals Planck's constant. Then, their
common eigenstates constitute the Zak basis, each state specified by two phase
parameters. Upon enforcing a periodic dependence on the phases, one gets a
one-to-one mapping of the Hilbert space on the line onto the Hilbert space on
the torus. The Fourier coefficients of the periodic Zak bases make up the
discrete Zak bases. The two bases are mutually unbiased. We study these bases
in detail, including a brief discussion of their relation to Aharonov's modular
operators, and mention how they can be used to associate with the single degree
of freedom of the line a pair of genuine qubits.Comment: 15 pages, 3 figures; displayed abstract is shortened, see the paper
for the complete abstrac
QCD Corrections to Vector-Boson Fusion Processes in Warped Higgsless Models
We discuss the signatures of a representative Higgsless model with ideal
fermion delocalization in vector-boson fusion processes, focusing on the gold-
and silver-plated decay modes of the gauge bosons at the CERN-Large Hadron
Collider. For this purpose, we have developed a fully-flexible parton-level
Monte-Carlo program, which allows for the calculation of cross sections and
kinematic distributions within experimentally feasible selection cuts at
NLO-QCD accuracy. We find that Kaluza-Klein resonances give rise to very
distinctive distributions of the decay leptons. Similar to the Standard Model
case, within the Higgsless scenario the perturbative treatment of the
vector-boson scattering processes is under excellent control.Comment: 22 pages, 20 figure
Average transmission probability of a random stack
The transmission through a stack of identical slabs that are separated by
gaps with random widths is usually treated by calculating the average of the
logarithm of the transmission probability. We show how to calculate the average
of the transmission probability itself with the aid of a recurrence relation
and derive analytical upper and lower bounds. The upper bound, when used as an
approximation for the transmission probability, is unreasonably good and we
conjecture that it is asymptotically exact.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figure
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