1,579 research outputs found
Continuous variable remote state preparation
We extend exact deterministic remote state preparation (RSP) with minimal
classical communication to quantum systems of continuous variables. We show
that, in principle, it is possible to remotely prepare states of an ensemble
that is parameterized by infinitely many real numbers, i.e., by a real
function, while the classical communication cost is one real number only. We
demonstrate continuous variable RSP in three examples using (i) quadrature
measurement and phase space displacement operations, (ii) measurement of the
optical phase and unitaries shifting the same, and (iii) photon counting and
photon number shift.Comment: 7 pages, RevTeX
Ultrathin MoS2 membranes and their characterization through HRTEM and electron diffraction studies
Extended abstract of a paper presented at Microscopy and Microanalysis 2012 in Phoenix, Arizona, USA, July 29 - August 2, 201
Glueball Masses in Relativistic Potential Model
The problem of glueball mass spectra using the relativistic Dirac equation is
studied. Also the Breit-Fermi approach used to obtaining hyperfine splitting in
glueballs. Our approach is based on the assumption, that the nature and the
forces between two gluons are the short-range. We were to calculate the
glueball masses with used screened potential.Comment: 7 pages, LaTe
Stimulated Raman Adiabatic Passage (STIRAP) Among Degenerate-Level Manifolds
We examine the conditions needed to accomplish stimulated Raman adiabatic
passage (STIRAP) when the three levels (g, e and f) are degenerate, with
arbitrary couplings contributing to the pump-pulse interaction (g - e) and to
the Stokes-pulse interaction (e-f). We show that in general a sufficient
condition for complete population removal from the g set of degenerate states
for arbitrary, pure or mixed, initial state is that the degeneracies should not
decrease along the sequence g, e and f. We show that when this condition holds
it is possible to achieve the degenerate counterpart of conventional STIRAP,
whereby adiabatic passage produces complete population transfer. Indeed, the
system is equivalent to a set of independent three-state systems, in each of
which a STIRAP procedure can be implemented. We describe a scheme of unitary
transformations that produces this result. We also examine the cases when this
degeneracy constraint does not hold, and show what can be accomplished in those
cases. For example, for angular momentum states when the degeneracy of the g
and f levels is less than that of the e level we show how a special choice for
the pulse polarizations and phases can produce complete removal of population
from the g set. Our scheme can be a powerful tool for coherent control in
degenerate systems, because of its robustness when selective addressing of the
states is not required or impossible. We illustrate the analysis with several
analytically solvable examples, in which the degeneracies originate from
angular momentum orientation, as expressed by magnetic sublevels.Comment: 21 pages, 17 figure
Static properties and spin dynamics of the ferromagnetic spin-1 Bose gas in magnetic field
Properties of spin-1 Bose gases with ferromagnetic interaction in the
presence of a nonzero magnetic field are studied. The equation of state and
thermodynamic quantities are worked out with the help of a mean-field
approximation. The phase diagram besides Bose-Einstein condensation contains a
first order transition where two values of the magnetization coexist. The
dynamics is investigated with the help of the Random Phase Approximation. The
soft mode corresponding to the critical point of the magnetic phase transition
is found to behave like in conventional theory.Comment: 8 pages and 3 figures included in text, submitted to Physical Review
Response to comments on "Differential Sensitivity to Human Communication in Dogs, Wolves, and Human Infants."
The comments by Fiset and Marshall-Pescini et al. raise important methodological issues and propose alternative accounts for our finding of perseverative search errors in dogs. Not denying that attentional processes and local enhancement are involved in such object search tasks, we provide here new evidence and argue that dogs’ behavior is affected by a combination of factors, including specific susceptibility to human communicative signals
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