8,743 research outputs found
Modeling and Analysis of Power Processing Systems
The feasibility of formulating a methodology for the modeling and analysis of aerospace electrical power processing systems is investigated. It is shown that a digital computer may be used in an interactive mode for the design, modeling, analysis, and comparison of power processing systems
Relativistically covariant state-dependent cloning of photons
The influence of the relativistic covariance requirement on the optimality of
the symmetric state-dependent 1 -> 2 cloning machine is studied. Namely, given
a photonic qubit whose basis is formed from the momentum-helicity eigenstates,
the change to the optimal cloning fidelity is calculated taking into account
the Lorentz covariance unitarily represented by Wigner's little group. To
pinpoint some of the interesting results, we found states for which the optimal
fidelity of the cloning process drops to 2/3 which corresponds to the fidelity
of the optimal classical cloner. Also, an implication for the security of the
BB84 protocol is analyzed.Comment: corrected, rewritten and accepted in PR
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Tumor necrosis factor-alpha regulates the expression of inducible costimulator receptor ligand on CD34+ progenitor cells during differentiation into antigen presenting cells
The inducible costimulator receptor (ICOS) is a third member of the CD28 receptor family that regulates T cell activation and function. ICOS binds to a newly identified ligand on antigen presenting cells different from the CD152 ligands CD80 and CD86. We used soluble ICOSIg and a newly developed murine anti-human ICOS ligand (ICOSL) monoclonal antibody to further characterize the ICOSL during ontogeny of antigen presenting cells. In a previous study, we found that ICOSL is expressed on monocytes, dendritic cells, and B cells. To define when ICOSL is first expressed on myeloid antigen presenting cells, we examined ICOSL expression on CD34 cells in bone marrow. We found that CD34bright cells regardless of their myeloid commitment were ICOSL , whereas ICOSL was first expressed when CD34 expression diminished and the myeloid marker CD33 appeared
Canonical connection on a class of Riemannian almost product manifolds
The canonical connection on a Riemannian almost product manifold is an
analogue to the Hermitian connection on an almost Hermitian manifold. In this
paper we consider the canonical connection on a class of Riemannian almost
product manifolds with non-integrable almost product structure. We construct
and characterize an example by a Lie group.Comment: 19 pages, some corrections in the example; J. Geom. (2012
Notes on multiplicativity of maximal output purity for completely positive qubit maps
A problem in quantum information theory that has received considerable
attention in recent years is the question of multiplicativity of the so-called
maximal output purity (MOP) of a quantum channel. This quantity is defined as
the maximum value of the purity one can get at the output of a channel by
varying over all physical input states, when purity is measured by the Schatten
-norm, and is denoted by . The multiplicativity problem is the
question whether two channels used in parallel have a combined that is
the product of the of the two channels. A positive answer would imply a
number of other additivity results in QIT.
Very recently, P. Hayden has found counterexamples for every value of .
Nevertheless, these counterexamples require that the dimension of these
channels increases with and therefore do not rule out multiplicativity
for in intervals with depending on the channel dimension. I
argue that this would be enough to prove additivity of entanglement of
formation and of the classical capacity of quantum channels.
More importantly, no counterexamples have as yet been found in the important
special case where one of the channels is a qubit-channel, i.e. its input
states are 2-dimensional. In this paper I focus attention to this qubit case
and I rephrase the multiplicativity conjecture in the language of block
matrices and prove the conjecture in a number of special cases.Comment: Manuscript for a talk presented at the SSPCM07 conference in
Myczkowce, Poland, 10/09/2007. 12 page
Intrinsic Gap of the nu=5/2 Fractional Quantum Hall State
The fractional quantum Hall effect is observed at low field, in a regime
where the cyclotron energy is smaller than the Coulomb interaction. The nu=5/2
excitation gap is measured to be 262+/-15 mK at ~2.6 T, in good agreement with
previous measurements performed on samples with similar mobility, but with
electronic density larger by a factor of two. The role of disorder on the
nu=5/2 gap is examined. Comparison between experiment and theory indicates that
a large discrepancy remains for the intrinsic gap extrapolated from the
infinite mobility (zero disorder) limit. In contrast, no such large discrepancy
is found for the nu=1/3 Laughlin state. The observation of the nu=5/2 state in
the low-field regime implies that inclusion of non-perturbative Landau level
mixing may be necessary to better understand the energetics of half-filled
fractional quantum hall liquids.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures; typo corrected, comment expande
Contrasting Behavior of the 5/2 and 7/3 Fractional Quantum Hall Effect in a Tilted Field
Using a tilted field geometry, the effect of an in-plane magnetic field on
the even denominator nu = 5/2 fractional quantum Hall state is studied. The
energy gap of the nu = 5/2 state is found to collapse linearly with the
in-plane magnetic field above ~0.5 T. In contrast, a strong enhancement of the
gap is observed for the nu = 7/3 state. The radically distinct tilted-field
behaviour between the two states is discussed in terms of Zeeman and
magneto-orbital coupling within the context of the proposed Moore-Read pfaffian
wavefunction for the 5/2 fractional quantum Hall effect
Geometric Quantum Computation
We describe in detail a general strategy for implementing a conditional
geometric phase between two spins. Combined with single-spin operations, this
simple operation is a universal gate for quantum computation, in that any
unitary transformation can be implemented with arbitrary precision using only
single-spin operations and conditional phase shifts. Thus quantum geometrical
phases can form the basis of any quantum computation. Moreover, as the induced
conditional phase depends only on the geometry of the paths executed by the
spins it is resilient to certain types of errors and offers the potential of a
naturally fault-tolerant way of performing quantum computation.Comment: 15 pages, LaTeX, uses cite, eepic, epsfig, graphicx and amsfonts.
Accepted by J. Mod. Op
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