1,384 research outputs found
Electromagnetic Spectrum from QGP Fluid
We calculate thermal photon and electron pair distribution from hot QCD
matter produced in high energy heavy-ion collisions, based on a hydrodynamical
model which is so tuned as to reproduce the recent experimental data at CERN
SPS, and compare these electromagnetic spectra with experimental data given by
CERN WA80 and CERES. We investigate mainly the effects of the off-shell
properties of the source particles on the electromagnetic spectra.Comment: 5 pages, latex, 4 Postscript figures. A talk given at the
International School on the Physics of Quark Gluon Plasma, June 3-6, 1997,
Hiroshima, Japan. To be appeared in Prog. Theor. Phys. Supplemen
Efficient-phase-encoding protocols for continuous-variable quantum key distribution using coherent states and postselection
We propose efficient-phase-encoding protocols for continuous-variable quantum
key distribution using coherent states and postselection. By these phase
encodings, the probability of basis mismatch is reduced and total efficiency is
increased. We also propose mixed-state protocols by omitting a part of
classical communication steps in the efficient-phase-encoding protocols. The
omission implies a reduction of information to an eavesdropper and possibly
enhances the security of the protocols. We investigate the security of the
protocols against individual beam splitting attack.Comment: RevTeX4, 8 pages, 9 figure
Nonlinear Phenomena in Canonical Stochastic Quantization
Stochastic quantization provides a connection between quantum field theory
and statistical mechanics, with applications especially in gauge field
theories. Euclidean quantum field theory is viewed as the equilibrium limit of
a statistical system coupled to a thermal reservoir. Nonlinear phenomena in
stochastic quantization arise when employing nonlinear Brownian motion as an
underlying stochastic process. We discuss a novel formulation of the Higgs
mechanism in QED.Comment: 8 pages, invited talk at the International Workshop ``Critical
Phenomena and Diffusion in Complex Systems'', Dec. 5-7, 2006, Nizhni
Novgorod, Russi
Measurement Theory in Lax-Phillips Formalism
It is shown that the application of Lax-Phillips scattering theory to quantum
mechanics provides a natural framework for the realization of the ideas of the
Many-Hilbert-Space theory of Machida and Namiki to describe the development of
decoherence in the process of measurement. We show that if the quantum
mechanical evolution is pointwise in time, then decoherence occurs only if the
Hamiltonian is time-dependent. If the evolution is not pointwise in time (as in
Liouville space), then the decoherence may occur even for closed systems. These
conclusions apply as well to the general problem of mixing of states.Comment: 14 pages, IASSNS-HEP 93/6
Macroscopic limit of a solvable dynamical model
The interaction between an ultrarelativistic particle and a linear array made
up of two-level systems (^^ ^^ AgBr" molecules) is studied by making use of
a modified version of the Coleman-Hepp Hamiltonian. Energy-exchange processes
between the particle and the molecules are properly taken into account, and the
evolution of the total system is calculated exactly both when the array is
initially in the ground state and in a thermal state. In the macroscopic limit
(), the system remains solvable and leads to interesting
connections with the Jaynes-Cummings model, that describes the interaction of a
particle with a maser. The visibility of the interference pattern produced by
the two branch waves of the particle is computed, and the conditions under
which the spin array in the limit behaves as a ^^ ^^
detector" are investigated. The behavior of the visibility yields good insights
into the issue of quantum measurements: It is found that, in the
thermodynamical limit, a superselection-rule space appears in the description
of the (macroscopic) apparatus. In general, an initial thermal state of the ^^
^^ detector" provokes a more substantial loss of quantum coherence than an
initial ground state. It is argued that a system decoheres more as the
temperature of the detector increases. The problem of ^^ ^^ imperfect
measurements" is also shortly discussed.Comment: 30 pages, report BA-TH/93-13
Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen-like correlation on a coherent-state basis and inseparability of two-mode Gaussian states
The strange property of the Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen (EPR) correlation between
two remote physical systems is a primitive object on the study of quantum
entanglement. In order to understand the entanglement in canonical
continuous-variable systems, a pair of the EPR-like uncertainties is an
essential tool. Here, we consider a normalized pair of the EPR-like
uncertainties and introduce a state-overlap to a classically correlated mixture
of coherent states. The separable condition associated with this state-overlap
determines the strength of the EPR-like correlation on a coherent-state basis
in order that the state is entangled. We show that the coherent-state-based
condition is capable of detecting the class of two-mode Gaussian entangled
states. We also present an experimental measurement scheme for estimation of
the state-overlap by a heterodyne measurement and a photon detection with a
feedforward operation.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures. A part of the materials in Sec. VI B of previous
versions was moved into another paper: Journal of Atomic, Molecular, and
Optical Physics, 2012, 854693 (2012).
http://www.hindawi.com/journals/jamop/2012/854693
Exponential behavior of a quantum system in a macroscopic medium
An exponential behavior at all times is derived for a solvable dynamical
model in the weak-coupling, macroscopic limit. Some implications for the
quantum measurement problem are discussed, in particular in connection with
dissipation.Comment: 8 pages, report BA-TH/94-17
Dynamical Semigroup Description of Coherent and Incoherent Particle-Matter Interaction
The meaning of statistical experiments with single microsystems in quantum
mechanics is discussed and a general model in the framework of non-relativistic
quantum field theory is proposed, to describe both coherent and incoherent
interaction of a single microsystem with matter. Compactly developing the
calculations with superoperators, it is shown that the introduction of a time
scale, linked to irreversibility of the reduced dynamics, directly leads to a
dynamical semigroup expressed in terms of quantities typical of scattering
theory. Its generator consists of two terms, the first linked to a coherent
wavelike behaviour, the second related to an interaction having a measuring
character, possibly connected to events the microsystem produces propagating
inside matter. In case these events breed a measurement, an explicit
realization of some concepts of modern quantum mechanics ("effects" and
"operations") arises. The relevance of this description to a recent debate
questioning the validity of ordinary quantum mechanics to account for such
experimental situations as, e.g., neutron-interferometry, is briefly discussed.Comment: 22 pages, latex, no figure
Fidelity criterion for quantum-domain transmission and storage of coherent states beyond unit-gain constraint
We generalize the experimental success criterion for quantum
teleportation/memory in continuous-variable quantum systems to be suitable for
non-unit-gain condition by considering attenuation/amplification of the
coherent-state amplitude. The new criterion can be used for a non-ideal quantum
memory and long distance quantum communication as well as quantum devices with
amplification process. It is also shown that the framework to measure the
average fidelity is capable of detecting all Gaussian channels in quantum
domain.Comment: 4pages, No figures, Accepted for publication in PR
Exotic Kondo-hole band resistivity and magnetoresistance of CeLaOsSb alloys
Electrical resistivity measurements of non-magnetic single-crystalline
CeLaOsSb alloys, and 0.1, are reported for
temperatures down to 20 mK and magnetic fields up to 18 T. At the lowest
temperatures, the resistivity of CeLaOsSb has a
Fermi-liquid-like temperature variation , but with negative
in small fields. The resistivity has an unusually strong magnetic field
dependence for a paramagnetic metal. The 20 mK resistivity increases by 75%
between H=0 and 4 T and then decreases by 65% between 4 T and 18 T. Similarly,
the coefficient increases with the field from -77 to 29cmK between H=0 and 7 T and then decreases to 18cmK for 18 T. This nontrivial temperature and field variation
is attributed to the existence of a very narrow Kondo-hole band in the
hybridization gap, which pins the Fermi energy. Due to disorder the Kondo-hole
band has localized states close to the band edges. The resistivity for
has a qualitatively similar behavior to that of , but with a larger
Kondo-hole band
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