76 research outputs found
Coherent quantum transport in disordered systems I: The influence of dephasing on the transport properties and absorption spectra on one-dimensional systems
Excitonic transport in static disordered one dimensional systems is studied
in the presence of thermal fluctuations that are described by the
Haken-Strobl-Reineker model. For short times, non-diffusive behavior is
observed that can be characterized as the free-particle dynamics in the
Anderson localized system. Over longer time scales, the environment-induced
dephasing is sufficient to overcome the Anderson localization caused by the
disorder and allow for transport to occur which is always seen to be diffusive.
In the limiting regimes of weak and strong dephasing quantum master equations
are developed, and their respective scaling relations imply the existence of a
maximum in the diffusion constant as a function of the dephasing rate that is
confirmed numerically. In the weak dephasing regime, it is demonstrated that
the diffusion constant is proportional to the square of the localization length
which leads to a significant enhancement of the transport rate over the
classical prediction. Finally, the influence of noise and disorder on the
absorption spectrum is presented and its relationship to the transport
properties is discussed.Comment: 23 pages, 7 figure
Negativity as a distance from a separable state
The computable measure of the mixed-state entanglement, the negativity, is
shown to admit a clear geometrical interpretation, when applied to
Schmidt-correlated (SC) states: the negativity of a SC state equals a distance
of the state from a pertinent separable state. As a consequence, a SC state is
separable if and only if its negativity vanishes. Another remarkable
consequence is that the negativity of a SC can be estimated "at a glance" on
the density matrix. These results are generalized to mixtures of SC states,
which emerge in certain quantum-dynamical settings.Comment: 9 pages, 1 figur
Time-resolved extinction rates of stochastic populations
Extinction of a long-lived isolated stochastic population can be described as
an exponentially slow decay of quasi-stationary probability distribution of the
population size. We address extinction of a population in a two-population
system in the case when the population turnover -- renewal and removal -- is
much slower than all other processes. In this case there is a time scale
separation in the system which enables one to introduce a short-time
quasi-stationary extinction rate W_1 and a long-time quasi-stationary
extinction rate W_2, and develop a time-dependent theory of the transition
between the two rates. It is shown that W_1 and W_2 coincide with the
extinction rates when the population turnover is absent, and present but very
slow, respectively. The exponentially large disparity between the two rates
reflects fragility of the extinction rate in the population dynamics without
turnover.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figure
Dublin City University at CLEF 2004: experiments in monolingual, bilingual and multilingual retrieval
The Dublin City University group participated in the monolingual, bilingual and multilingual retrieval tasks this year. The main focus of our investigation this year was extending our retrieval system to document languages other than English, and completing the multilingual task comprising four languages: English, French, Russian and Finnish. Results from our French monolingual experiments indicate that working in French is more effective for retrieval than adopting document and topic translation to English. However, comparison of our multilingual retrieval results using different topic and document translation reveals that this result does not extend to retrieved list merging for the multilingual task in a simple predictable way
Dublin City University at CLEF 2004: experiments with the ImageCLEF St Andrew's collection
For the CLEF 2004 ImageCLEF St Andrew's Collection task
the Dublin City University group carried out three sets of experiments: standard cross-language information retrieval (CLIR) runs using topic translation via machine translation (MT), combination of this run with image matching results from the VIPER system, and a novel document rescoring approach based on automatic MT evaluation metrics. Our standard MT-based CLIR works well on this task. Encouragingly combination with image matching lists is also observed to produce small positive changes in the retrieval output. However, rescoring using the MT evaluation metrics in their current form significantly reduced retrieval
effectiveness
Noise and Controllability: suppression of controllability in large quantum systems
A closed quantum system is defined as completely controllable if an arbitrary
unitary transformation can be executed using the available controls. In
practice, control fields are a source of unavoidable noise. Can one design
control fields such that the effect of noise is negligible on the time-scale of
the transformation? Complete controllability in practice requires that the
effect of noise can be suppressed for an arbitrary transformation. The present
study considers a paradigm of control, where the Lie-algebraic structure of the
control Hamiltonian is fixed, while the size of the system increases,
determined by the dimension of the Hilbert space representation of the algebra.
We show that for large quantum systems, generic noise in the controls dominates
for a typical class of target transformations i.e., complete controllability is
destroyed by the noise.Comment: 4 pages, no figure
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