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Bounds on quantum communication via Newtonian gravity
Newtonian gravity yields specific observable consequences, the most striking
of which is the emergence of a force. In so far as communication can
arise via such interactions between distant particles, we can ask what would be
expected for a theory of gravity that only allows classical communication. Many
heuristic suggestions for gravity-induced decoherence have this restriction
implicitly or explicitly in their construction. Here we show that communication
via a force has a minimum noise induced in the system when the
communication cannot convey quantum information, in a continuous time analogue
to Bell's inequalities. Our derived noise bounds provide tight constraints from
current experimental results on any theory of gravity that does not allow
quantum communication.Comment: 13 pages, 1 figur
Dispersion of biased swimming microorganisms in a fluid flowing through a tube
Classical Taylor-Aris dispersion theory is extended to describe the transport
of suspensions of self-propelled dipolar cells in a tubular flow. General
expressions for the mean drift and effective diffusivity are determined exactly
in terms of axial moments, and compared with an approximation a la Taylor. As
in the Taylor-Aris case, the skewness of a finite distribution of biased
swimming cells vanishes at long times. The general expressions can be applied
to particular models of swimming microorganisms, and thus be used to predict
swimming drift and diffusion in tubular bioreactors, and to elucidate competing
unbounded swimming drift and diffusion descriptions. Here, specific examples
are presented for gyrotactic swimming algae.Comment: 20 pages, 4 figures. Published version available at
http://rspa.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/early/2010/02/09/rspa.2009.0606.short?rss=
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Distributed simulation and the grid: Position statements
The Grid provides a new and unrivaled technology for large scale distributed simulation as it enables collaboration and the use of distributed computing resources. This panel paper presents the views of four researchers in the area of Distributed Simulation and the Grid. Together we try to identify the main research issues involved in applying Grid technology to distributed simulation and the key future challenges that need to be solved to achieve this goal. Such challenges include not only technical challenges, but also political ones such as management methodology for the Grid and the development of standards. The benefits of the Grid to end-user simulation modelers also are discussed
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