167 research outputs found

    Book Reviews

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    Book 1 Book Title: Basic EpidemiologyBook Authors: R. Beaglehole, R. Bonita & T. KjellströmPp. viii + 174. (in English, French and Spanish in preparation). 19,40.Geneva:WHO.1993.OrderNo.1150395.ISBN9241544465.Book2BookTitle: APocketBookofSocialandCommunityPaediatricsBookAuthor: JoSibertPp.viii+164.London:EdwardArnold.1992.ISBN0340549297.Book3BookTitle:KnowledgeBeatsCancerBookAuthor: AlbertStegmannAlbertsPp.226.Illustrated.R55,45.Pretoria:HaumTertiary.1993.ISBN0798631961.Book4BookTitle:AIDSandYourResponsePp.vi+226.R49,50.ISBN062017319X.Book5BookTitle:PrinciplesforEvaluatingChemicalEffectsontheAgedPopulation.EnviromnentalHealthCriteria.No.144BookAuthor:W.H.O.Pp.159.(Englishonly).19,40. Geneva: WHO. 1993. Order No. 1150395. ISBN 92-4-154446-5.Book 2Book Title: A Pocket Book of Social and Community PaediatricsBook Author: Jo SibertPp. viii + 164. London: Edward Arnold. 1992. ISBN 0-340-54929-7.Book 3Book Title: Knowledge Beats CancerBook Author: Albert Stegmann AlbertsPp. 226. Illustrated. R55,45. Pretoria: Haum Tertiary. 1993. ISBN 0-7986-3196-1.Book 4Book Title: AIDS and Your ResponsePp. vi + 226. R49,50. ISBN 0-620-17319-X.Book 5Book Title: Principles for Evaluating Chemical Effects on the Aged Population. Enviromnental Health Criteria. No. 144Book Author: W.H.O.Pp. 159. (English only). 20,50. Geneva: WHO. 1993. Order No. 1160144. ISBN 92-4-1571446.Book 6Book Title: The Guide to Heart Sounds: Normal and AbnormalBook Authors: Donald W. Novey, Marcia Pencak & John M. StangAudio-cassette narrated by: Donald W. Novey. pp. xi + 74. Illustrated. Florida: CRC Press. 1988. ISB J 0-8493-0153X.Book 7Book Title: Propachlor. Enviromnental Health Criteria. No. 147Book Author: W.H.O.Pp. 110. (English, French and Spanish summaries). $17,30. Geneva: WHO. 1993. Order TO. 1160147. ISBN 92-4-157147-0.Book 8Book Title: Quality Assurance in Health Care: A HandbookBook Authors: Roger Ellis & Dorothy WhittingronLondon: Edward Arnold. 1993. ISBN 0-340-55273-5.Book 9Book Title:  Rehabilitation after Cardiovascular Diseases, with Special Emphasis on Developing CountriesReport of a WHO expert committee. Technical Report Series No 831. Pp. viii + 122 (available in English, French and Spanish in preparation). Geneva: WHO. 1993. ISBN 92-4-120831-7

    Books

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    Medical audit Audit in Action. Ed. by Richard Smith. Pp. xiv + 245. Illustrated. £10,95. London: British Medical Journal. 1992. Available from Libriger Book Distributors, Bloemfontein.Rheumatology Bailliere's Clinical Rheumatology: Giant Cell Arteritis and Polymyalgia RheuIDatica. Guest eds B. L. Hazleman and B.-A. Bengtsson. Pp. xi + 507. illustrated. £27,50. London: Bailliere Tindall. 1991.AIDS, drugs and sexual risk AIDS, Drugs and Sexual Risk. By N. McKeganey and M. Bamard. Johannesburg: Random Century. 1992.Radiation When is a Dose Not a Dose? By Victor P. Bond. Pp. 39. Illustrated. Bethesda: National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurements. 1992.Autoimmune disease Clinical and Molecular Aspects of Autoimmune Diseases. Vol. 8. Ed. by J. M. Cruse and R. E. Lewis. Pp. x + 258. Illustrated. SFr. 248. Basel: Karger. 1992.Biochemical toxicology Principles of Biochemical Toxicology. 2nd ed. By J. A. Timbrel!. Illustrated. Pp. 415. RI53,73. London: Taylor & Frands. 1991.Advances in pineal research Advances in Pineal Research. Vol. 6. Ed. by Andrew Foldes and R. J. Reiter. pp. viii + 286. illustrated. £32,50. London: John Libbey. 1991.Health care for the future The Future of Health Care. Pp. 83. Illustrated. London: British Medical Journal. 1992.STDs and AIDS School Health Education to Prevent AIDS and Sexually Transmitted Disease. Pp. 79. SFr. 18. Geneva: World Health Organisation. 1992

    An Approach to the Cosmological Constant Problem(s)

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    We propose an approach to explaining why naive large quantum fluctuations are not the right estimate for the cosmological constant. We argue that the universe is in a superposition of many vacua, in such a way that the resulting fluctuations are suppressed by level repulsion to a very small value. The approach combines several aspects of string theory and the early history of the universe, and is only valid if several assumptions hold true. The approach may also explain why the effective cosmological constant reamins small as the universe evolves though several phase transitions. It provides a non-anthropic mechansim leading to a small, non-zero cosmological constant.Comment: Talk given at Rencontres de Moriond, 2004 by G.L. Kan

    Optical Detection of a Single Nuclear Spin

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    We propose a method to optically detect the spin state of a 31-P nucleus embedded in a 28-Si matrix. The nuclear-electron hyperfine splitting of the 31-P neutral-donor ground state can be resolved via a direct frequency discrimination measurement of the 31-P bound exciton photoluminescence using single photon detectors. The measurement time is expected to be shorter than the lifetime of the nuclear spin at 4 K and 10 T.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure

    Quantum cellular automata quantum computing with endohedral fullerenes

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    We present a scheme to perform universal quantum computation using global addressing techniques as applied to a physical system of endohedrally doped fullerenes. The system consists of an ABAB linear array of Group V endohedrally doped fullerenes. Each molecule spin site consists of a nuclear spin coupled via a Hyperfine interaction to an electron spin. The electron spin of each molecule is in a quartet ground state S=3/2S=3/2. Neighboring molecular electron spins are coupled via a magnetic dipole interaction. We find that an all-electron construction of a quantum cellular automata is frustrated due to the degeneracy of the electronic transitions. However, we can construct a quantum celluar automata quantum computing architecture using these molecules by encoding the quantum information on the nuclear spins while using the electron spins as a local bus. We deduce the NMR and ESR pulses required to execute the basic cellular automata operation and obtain a rough figure of merit for the the number of gate operations per decoherence time. We find that this figure of merit compares well with other physical quantum computer proposals. We argue that the proposed architecture meets well the first four DiVincenzo criteria and we outline various routes towards meeting the fifth criteria: qubit readout.Comment: 16 pages, Latex, 5 figures, See http://planck.thphys.may.ie/QIPDDF/ submitted to Phys. Rev.

    Limits to error correction in quantum chaos

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    We study the correction of errors that have accumulated in an entangled state of spins as a result of unknown local variations in the Zeeman energy (B) and spin-spin interaction energy (J). A non-degenerate code with error rate kappa can recover the original state with high fidelity within a time kappa^1/2 / max(B,J) -- independent of the number of encoded qubits. Whether the Hamiltonian is chaotic or not does not affect this time scale, but it does affect the complexity of the error-correcting code.Comment: 4 pages including 1 figur

    Classical model for bulk-ensemble NMR quantum computation

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    We present a classical model for bulk-ensemble NMR quantum computation: the quantum state of the NMR sample is described by a probability distribution over the orientations of classical tops, and quantum gates are described by classical transition probabilities. All NMR quantum computing experiments performed so far with three quantum bits can be accounted for in this classical model. After a few entangling gates, the classical model suffers an exponential decrease of the measured signal, whereas there is no corresponding decrease in the quantum description. We suggest that for small numbers of quantum bits, the quantum nature of NMR quantum computation lies in the ability to avoid an exponential signal decrease.Comment: 14 pages, no figures, revte

    An all silicon quantum computer

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    A solid-state implementation of a quantum computer composed entirely of silicon is proposed. Qubits are Si-29 nuclear spins arranged as chains in a Si-28 (spin-0) matrix with Larmor frequencies separated by a large magnetic field gradient. No impurity dopants or electrical contacts are needed. Initialization is accomplished by optical pumping, algorithmic cooling, and pseudo-pure state techniques. Magnetic resonance force microscopy is used for readout. This proposal takes advantage of many of the successful aspects of solution NMR quantum computation, including ensemble measurement, RF control, and long decoherence times, but it allows for more qubits and improved initialization.Comment: ReVTeX 4, 5 pages, 2 figure

    The potential of trading activity income to fund third sector organisations operating in deprived areas

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    In the United Kingdom, as in other countries, Third Sector Organisations (TSOs) have been drawn towards income sources associated with trading activities (Teasdale, 2010), but many remain reliant on grant funding to support such activities (Chell, 2007). Using a multivariate analysis approach and data from the National Survey of Charities and Social Enterprises (NSCSE), it is found that trading activities are used relatively commonly in deprived areas. These organisations are also more likely to attempt to access public sector funds. This suggests policy-makers need to consider the impact of funding cuts on TSOs in the most deprived areas as TSOs are unlikely achieve their objectives without continuing support

    Capacitance of a quantum dot from the channel-anisotropic two-channel Kondo model

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    We investigate the charge fluctuations of a large quantum dot coupled to a two-dimensional electron gas via a quantum point contact following the work of Matveev. We limit our discussion to the case where exactly two channels enter the dot and we discuss the role of an anisotropy between the transmission coefficients (for these two channels) at the constriction. Experimentally, a channel-anisotropy can be introduced applying a relatively weak in-plane magnetic field to the system when only one ``orbital'' channel is open. The magnetic field leads to different transmission amplitudes for spin-up and spin-down electrons. In a strong magnetic field the anisotropic two-channel limit corresponds to two (spin-polarized) orbital channels entering the dot. The physics of the charge fluctuations can be captured using a mapping on the channel-anisotropic two-channel Kondo model. For the case of weak reflection at the point contact this has already briefly been stressed by one of us in PRB {\bf 64}, 161302R (2001). This mapping is also appropriate to discuss the conductance behavior of a two-contact set-up in strong magnetic field. Here, we elaborate on this approach and also discuss an alternative solution using a mapping on a channel-isotropic Kondo model. In addition we consider the limit of weak transmission. We show that the Coulomb-staircase behavior of the charge in the dot as a function of the gate voltage, is already smeared out by a small channel-anisotropy both in the weak- and strong transmission limits.Comment: 17 pages, 4 figures, 1 Table; Expands cond-mat/0101126; Sec. VI on 2-contact setup added (Final version for PRB
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