2,399 research outputs found
Superqubits
We provide a supersymmetric generalization of n quantum bits by extending the
local operations and classical communication entanglement equivalence group
[SU(2)]^n to the supergroup [uOSp(1|2)]^n and the stochastic local operations
and classical communication equivalence group [SL(2,C)]^n to the supergroup
[OSp(1|2)]^n. We introduce the appropriate supersymmetric generalizations of
the conventional entanglement measures for the cases of and . In
particular, super-Greenberger-Horne-Zeilinger states are characterized by a
nonvanishing superhyperdeterminant.Comment: 16 pages, 4 figures, 4 tables, revtex; minor corrections, version
appearing in Phys. Rev.
Anderson localization on the Falicov-Kimball model with Coulomb disorder
The role of Coulomb disorder is analysed in the Anderson-Falicov-Kimball
model. Phase diagrams of correlated and disordered electron systems are
calculated within dynamical mean-field theory applied to the Bethe lattice, in
which metal-insulator transitions led by structural and Coulomb disorders and
correlation can be identified. Metallic, Mott insulator, and Anderson insulator
phases, as well as the crossover between them are studied in this perspective.
We show that Coulomb disorder has a relevant role in the phase-transition
behavior as the system is led towards the insulator regime
Wrapped branes as qubits
Recent work has established a correspondence between the tripartite
entanglement measure of three qubits and the macroscopic entropy of the
four-dimensional 8-charge STU black hole of supergravity. Here we consider the
configurations of intersecting D3-branes, whose wrapping around the six compact
dimensions T^6 provides the microscopic string-theoretic interpretation of the
charges, and associate the three-qubit basis vectors |ABC>, (A,B,C=0 or 1) with
the corresponding 8 wrapping cycles. In particular, we relate a well-known fact
of quantum information theory, that the most general real three-qubit state can
be parameterized by four real numbers and an angle, to a well-known fact of
string theory, that the most general STU black hole can be described by four
D3-branes intersecting at an angle.Comment: Version appearing in Phys. Rev. Lett, includes Type IIA description
as well as Type II
The Quiescent X-ray Spectrum of Accreting Black Holes
The quiescent state is the dominant accretion mode for black holes on all
mass scales. Our knowledge of the X-ray spectrum is limited due to the
characteristic low luminosity in this state. Herein, we present an analysis of
the sample of dynamically-confirmed stellar-mass black holes observed in
quiescence in the \textit{Chandra/XMM-Newton/Suzaku} era resulting in a sample
of 8 black holes with 570 ks of observations. In contrast to the
majority of AGN where observations are limited by contamination from diffuse
gas, the stellar-mass systems allow for a clean study of the X-ray spectrum
resulting from the accretion flow alone. The data are characterized using
simple models. We find a model consisting of a power-law or thermal
bremsstrahlung to both provide excellent descriptions of the data, where we
measure and
respectively in the 0.3 -- 10 keV bandpass, at a median luminosity of . This result in discussed in the context of our
understanding of the accretion flow onto stellar and supermassive black holes
at low luminosities.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures, 2 tables, MNRAS accepte
A comparison of broad iron emission lines in archival data of neutron star low-mass X-ray binaries
Relativistic X-ray disk-lines have been found in multiple neutron star
low-mass X-ray binaries, in close analogy with black holes across the
mass-scale. These lines have tremendous diagnostic power and have been used to
constrain stellar radii and magnetic fields, often finding values that are
consistent with independent timing techniques. Here, we compare CCD-based data
from Suzaku with Fe K line profiles from archival data taken with gas-based
spectrometers. In general, we find good consistency between the gas-based line
profiles from EXOSAT, BeppoSAX and RXTE and the CCD data from Suzaku,
demonstrating that the broad profiles seen are intrinsic to the line and not
broad due to instrumental issues. However, we do find that when fitting with a
Gaussian line profile, the width of the Gaussian can depend on the continuum
model in instruments with low spectral resolution, though when the different
models fit equally well the line widths generally agree. We also demonstrate
that three BeppoSAX observations show evidence for asymmetric lines, with a
relativistic disk-line model providing a significantly better fit than a
Gaussian. We test this by using the posterior predictive p-value method, and
bootstrapping of the spectra to show that such deviations from a Gaussian are
unlikely to be observed by chance.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figures, accepted to Ap
A Rapidly Spinning Black Hole Powers the Einstein Cross
Observations over the past 20 years have revealed a strong relationship
between the properties of the supermassive black hole (SMBH) lying at the
center of a galaxy and the host galaxy itself. The magnitude of the spin of the
black hole will play a key role in determining the nature of this relationship.
To date, direct estimates of black hole spin have been restricted to the local
Universe. Herein, we present the results of an analysis of 0.5 Ms of
archival Chandra observations of the gravitationally lensed quasar Q 2237+305
(aka the "Einstein-cross"), lying at a redshift of z = 1.695. The boost in flux
provided by the gravitational lens allows constraints to be placed on the spin
of a black hole at such high redshift for the first time. Utilizing state of
the art relativistic disk reflection models, the black hole is found to have a
spin of at the 90% confidence level. Placing a
lower limit on the spin, we find (4). The high value of
the spin for the black hole in Q 2237+305 lends
further support to the coherent accretion scenario for black hole growth. This
is the most distant black hole for which the spin has been directly constrained
to date.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, 1 table, formatted using emulateapj.cls. Accepted
for publication in ApJ
Long-Range Dependence in Exchange Rates: the case of the European Monetary System
In this work we measure the evolution of the long-range dependence phenomenon of returns and volatilities of nominal British exchange rates (British pound against US dollar) futures contracts negotiated on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange from 1986 to 2004. The measurement employs the R/S classic analysis, Detrended Fluctuation Analysis and Generalized Hurst exponents, upon a 1008-observation window, which moves along the data. We obtain as a result, the effects of the 1992 European financial crises on the measurements of the long-range dependency phenomenon. After the crisis the returns of this futures contract showed no signs of the long-range memory, which existed before the crisis. The volatility presented moderate long-range memory the whole time. We also test for long-memory in European currencies inside the European Monetary System and find evidence of moderate long memory, which suggests that being inside the EMS increases predictability.
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