9,070 research outputs found
Avoiding Loopholes with Hybrid Bell-Leggett-Garg Inequalities
By combining the postulates of macrorealism with Bell locality, we derive a
qualitatively different hybrid inequality that avoids two loopholes that
commonly appear in Leggett-Garg and Bell inequalities. First, locally invasive
measurements can be used, which avoids the "clumsiness" Leggett-Garg inequality
loophole. Second, a single experimental ensemble with fixed analyzer settings
is sampled, which avoids the "disjoint sampling" Bell inequality loophole. The
derived hybrid inequality has the same form as the Clauser-Horne-Shimony-Holt
Bell inequality; however, its quantum violation intriguingly requires weak
measurements. A realistic explanation of an observed violation requires either
the failure of Bell locality, or a preparation-conspiracy of finely tuned and
nonlocally correlated noise. Modern superconducting and optical systems are
poised to implement this test.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, published versio
Implementation of Epidemic Routing with IP Convergence Layer in ns-3
We present the Epidemic routing protocol implementation in ns-3. It is a
full-featured DTN protocol in that it supports the message abstraction and
store-and-haul behavior. We compare the performance of our Epidemic routing
ns-3 implementation with the existing implementation of Epidemic in the ONE
simulator, and discuss the differences
Weak values are universal in von Neumann measurements
We refute the widely held belief that the quantum weak value necessarily
pertains to weak measurements. To accomplish this, we use the transverse
position of a beam as the detector for the conditioned von Neumann measurement
of a system observable. For any coupling strength, any initial states, and any
choice of conditioning, the averages of the detector position and momentum are
completely described by the real parts of three generalized weak values in the
joint Hilbert space. Higher-order detector moments also have similar weak value
expansions. Using the Wigner distribution of the initial detector state, we
find compact expressions for these weak values within the reduced system
Hilbert space. As an application of the approach, we show that for any
Hermite-Gauss mode of a paraxial beam-like detector these expressions reduce to
the real and imaginary parts of a single system weak value plus an additional
weak-value-like contribution that only affects the momentum shift.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, includes Supplementary Materia
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Defined factors to reactivate cell cycle activity in adult mouse cardiomyocytes.
Adult mammalian cardiomyocytes exit the cell cycle during the neonatal period, commensurate with the loss of regenerative capacity in adult mammalian hearts. We established conditions for long-term culture of adult mouse cardiomyocytes that are genetically labeled with fluorescence. This technique permits reliable analyses of proliferation of pre-existing cardiomyocytes without complications from cardiomyocyte marker expression loss due to dedifferentiation or significant contribution from cardiac progenitor cell expansion and differentiation in culture. Using this system, we took a candidate gene approach to screen for fetal-specific proliferative gene programs that can induce proliferation of adult mouse cardiomyocytes. Using pooled gene delivery and subtractive gene elimination, we identified a novel functional interaction between E2f Transcription Factor 2 (E2f2) and Brain Expressed X-Linked (Bex)/Transcription elongation factor A-like (Tceal) superfamily members Bex1 and Tceal8. Specifically, Bex1 and Tceal8 both preserved cell viability during E2f2-induced cell cycle re-entry. Although Tceal8 inhibited E2f2-induced S-phase re-entry, Bex1 facilitated DNA synthesis while inhibiting cell death. In sum, our study provides a valuable method for adult cardiomyocyte proliferation research and suggests that Bex family proteins may function in modulating cell proliferation and death decisions during cardiomyocyte development and maturation
Violating the Modified Helstrom Bound with Nonprojective Measurements
We consider the discrimination of two pure quantum states with three allowed
outcomes: a correct guess, an incorrect guess, and a non-guess. To find an
optimum measurement procedure, we define a tunable cost that penalizes the
incorrect guess and non-guess outcomes. Minimizing this cost over all
projective measurements produces a rigorous cost bound that includes the usual
Helstrom discrimination bound as a special case. We then show that
nonprojective measurements can outperform this modified Helstrom bound for
certain choices of cost function. The Ivanovic-Dieks-Peres unambiguous state
discrimination protocol is recovered as a special case of this improvement.
Notably, while the cost advantage of the latter protocol is destroyed with the
introduction of any amount of experimental noise, other choices of cost
function have optima for which nonprojective measurements robustly show an
appreciable, and thus experimentally measurable, cost advantage. Such an
experiment would be an unambiguous demonstration of a benefit from
nonprojective measurements.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
Symmetric path integrals for stochastic equations with multiplicative noise
A Langevin equation with multiplicative noise is an equation schematically of
the form dq/dt = - F(q) + e(q) xi, where e(q) xi is Gaussian white noise whose
amplitude e(q) depends on q itself. I show how to convert such equations into
path integrals. The definition of the path integral depends crucially on the
convention used for discretizing time, and I specifically derive the correct
path integral when the convention used is the natural, time-symmetric one that
time derivatives are (q_t - q_{t-\Delta t}) / \Delta t and coordinates are (q_t
+ q_{t-\Delta t}) / 2. [This is the convention that permits standard
manipulations of calculus on the action, like naive integration by parts.] It
has sometimes been assumed in the literature that a Stratanovich Langevin
equation can be quickly converted to a path integral by treating time as
continuous but using the rule \theta(t=0) = 1/2. I show that this prescription
fails when the amplitude e(q) is q-dependent.Comment: 8 page
Implementing generalized measurements with superconducting qubits
We describe a method to perform any generalized purity-preserving measurement
of a qubit with techniques tailored to superconducting systems. First, we
consider two methods for realizing a two-outcome partial projection: using a
thresholded continuous measurement in the circuit QED setup, or using an
indirect ancilla qubit measurement. Second, we decompose an arbitrary
purity-preserving two-outcome measurement into single qubit unitary rotations
and a partial projection. Third, we systematically reduce any multiple-outcome
measurement to a sequence of such two-outcome measurements and unitary
operations. Finally, we consider how to define suitable fidelity measures for
multiple-outcome generalized measurements.Comment: 13 pages, 3 figure
Molecular-Kinetic Simulations of Escape from the Ex-planet and Exoplanets: Criterion for Transonic Flow
The equations of gas dynamics are extensively used to describe atmospheric
loss from solar system bodies and exoplanets even though the boundary
conditions at infinity are not uniquely defined. Using molecular-kinetic
simulations that correctly treat the transition from the continuum to the
rarefied region, we confirm that the energy-limited escape approximation is
valid when adiabatic expansion is the dominant cooling process. However, this
does not imply that the outflow goes sonic. In fact in the sonic regime, the
energy limited approximation can significantly under estimate the escape rate.
Rather large escape rates and concomitant adiabatic cooling can produce
atmospheres with subsonic flow that are highly extended. Since this affects the
heating rate of the upper atmosphere and the interaction with external fields
and plasmas, we give a criterion for estimating when the outflow goes transonic
in the continuum region. This is applied to early terrestrial atmospheres,
exoplanet atmospheres, and the atmosphere of the ex-planet, Pluto, all of which
have large escape rates. The paper and its erratum, combined here, are
published: ApJL 768, L4 (2013); ApJ, 779, L30 (2013).Comment: 11 pages, 3 figure
Order-dependent mappings: strong coupling behaviour from weak coupling expansions in non-Hermitian theories
A long time ago, it has been conjectured that a Hamiltonian with a potential
of the form x^2+i v x^3, v real, has a real spectrum. This conjecture has been
generalized to a class of so-called PT symmetric Hamiltonians and some proofs
have been given. Here, we show by numerical investigation that the divergent
perturbation series can be summed efficiently by an order-dependent mapping
(ODM) in the whole complex plane of the coupling parameter v^2, and that some
information about the location of level crossing singularities can be obtained
in this way. Furthermore, we discuss to which accuracy the strong-coupling
limit can be obtained from the initially weak-coupling perturbative expansion,
by the ODM summation method. The basic idea of the ODM summation method is the
notion of order-dependent "local" disk of convergence and analytic continuation
by an order-dependent mapping of the domain of analyticity augmented by the
local disk of convergence onto a circle. In the limit of vanishing local radius
of convergence, which is the limit of high transformation order, convergence is
demonstrated both by numerical evidence as well as by analytic estimates.Comment: 11 pages; 12 figure
Measuring a transmon qubit in circuit QED: dressed squeezed states
Using circuit QED, we consider the measurement of a superconducting transmon
qubit via a coupled microwave resonator. For ideally dispersive coupling,
ringing up the resonator produces coherent states with frequencies matched to
transmon energy states. Realistic coupling is not ideally dispersive, however,
so transmon-resonator energy levels hybridize into joint eigenstate ladders of
the Jaynes-Cummings type. Previous work has shown that ringing up the resonator
approximately respects this ladder structure to produce a coherent state in the
eigenbasis (a dressed coherent state). We numerically investigate the validity
of this coherent state approximation to find two primary deviations. First,
resonator ring-up leaks small stray populations into eigenstate ladders
corresponding to different transmon states. Second, within an eigenstate ladder
the transmon nonlinearity shears the coherent state as it evolves. We then show
that the next natural approximation for this sheared state in the eigenbasis is
a dressed squeezed state, and derive simple evolution equations for such states
using a hybrid phase-Fock-space description.Comment: 18 pages, 8 figures; v2 published versio
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