312 research outputs found
Autonomous power system intelligent diagnosis and control
The Autonomous Power System (APS) project at NASA Lewis Research Center is designed to demonstrate the abilities of integrated intelligent diagnosis, control, and scheduling techniques to space power distribution hardware. Knowledge-based software provides a robust method of control for highly complex space-based power systems that conventional methods do not allow. The project consists of three elements: the Autonomous Power Expert System (APEX) for fault diagnosis and control, the Autonomous Intelligent Power Scheduler (AIPS) to determine system configuration, and power hardware (Brassboard) to simulate a space based power system. The operation of the Autonomous Power System as a whole is described and the responsibilities of the three elements - APEX, AIPS, and Brassboard - are characterized. A discussion of the methodologies used in each element is provided. Future plans are discussed for the growth of the Autonomous Power System
Frequency Bin Entangled Photons
A monochromatic laser pumping a parametric down conversion crystal generates
frequency entangled photon pairs. We study this experimentally by addressing
such frequency entangled photons at telecommunication wavelengths (around 1550
nm) with fiber optics components such as electro-optic phase modulators and
narrow band frequency filters. The theory underlying our approach is developed
by introducing the notion of frequency bin entanglement. Our results show that
the phase modulators address coherently up to eleven frequency bins, leading to
an interference pattern which can violate a Bell inequality adapted to our
setup by more than five standard deviations.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures (extended version
A Survey of Finite Algebraic Geometrical Structures Underlying Mutually Unbiased Quantum Measurements
The basic methods of constructing the sets of mutually unbiased bases in the
Hilbert space of an arbitrary finite dimension are discussed and an emerging
link between them is outlined. It is shown that these methods employ a wide
range of important mathematical concepts like, e.g., Fourier transforms, Galois
fields and rings, finite and related projective geometries, and entanglement,
to mention a few. Some applications of the theory to quantum information tasks
are also mentioned.Comment: 20 pages, 1 figure to appear in Foundations of Physics, Nov. 2006 two
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Quantum entanglement with acousto-optic modulators: 2-photon beatings and Bell experiments with moving beamsplitters
We present an experiment testing quantum correlations with frequency shifted
photons. We test Bell inequality with 2-photon interferometry where we replace
the beamsplitters by acousto-optic modulators, which are equivalent to moving
beamsplitters. We measure the 2-photon beatings induced by the frequency
shifts, and we propose a cryptographic scheme in relation. Finally, setting the
experiment in a relativistic configuration, we demonstrate that the quantum
correlations are not only independent of the distance but also of the time
ordering between the two single-photon measurements.Comment: 14 pages, 16 figure
Crisis, Charisma and Consequences: Evidence from the 2004 US Presidential Election
We investigate how conditions of crisis affect perceptions of charisma and how these, in turn, affect blame attribution and self-sacrificial behavior. Our data are from a 2004 experimental study that preceded the U.S. presidential election, in which we manipulated concerns of a terrorist attack. The results show that those in the Crisis condition rated Bush higher on perceptions of charisma compared to those in the Good Times condition. The Crisis condition also directly and indirectly, via perceptions of charisma, affected whether Bush was blamed for failures in Iraq and our subjects’ willingness to sacrifice their personal resources for his candidacy
Regenerative memory in time-delayed neuromorphic photonic resonators
We investigate a photonic regenerative memory based upon a neuromorphic oscillator with a delayed self-feedback (autaptic) connection. We disclose the existence of a unique temporal response characteristic of localized structures enabling an ideal support for bits in an optical buffer memory for storage and reshaping of data information. We link our experimental implementation, based upon a nanoscale nonlinear resonant tunneling diode driving a laser, to the paradigm of neuronal activity, the FitzHugh-Nagumo model with delayed feedback. This proof-of-concept photonic regenerative memory might constitute a building block for a new class of neuron-inspired photonic memories that can handle high bit-rate optical signals
Implementing two-photon interference in the frequency domain with electro-optic phase modulators
Frequency-entangled photons can be readily produced using parametric
down-conversion. We have recently shown how such entanglement could be
manipulated and measured using electro-optic phase modulators and narrow-band
frequency filters, thereby leading to two-photon interference patterns in the
frequency domain. Here we introduce new theoretical and experimental
developments showing that this method is potentially a competitive platform for
the realization of quantum communication protocols in standard
telecommunication fibres. We derive a simple theoretical expression for the
coincidence probabilities and use it to optimize a Bell inequality.
Furthermore, we establish an equivalence between the entangled- photon scheme
and a classical interference scheme. Our measurements of two-photon
interference in the frequency domain yield raw visibilities in excess of 99%.
We use our high quality setup to experimentally validate the theoretical
predictions, and in particular we report a violation of the CH74 inequality by
more than 18 standard deviations.Comment: 19 pages, 3 figure
Squeezed-state quantum key distribution upon imperfect reconciliation
We address the security of continuous-variable quantum key distribution with
squeezed states upon realistic conditions of noisy and lossy environment and
limited reconciliation efficiency. Considering the generalized preparation
scheme and clearly distinguishing between classical and quantum resources, we
investigate the effect of finite squeezing on the tolerance of the protocol to
untrusted channel noise. For a long-distance strongly attenuating channel and
the consequent low reconciliation efficiency, we show that feasible limited
squeezing is surprisingly sufficient to provide the security of Gaussian
quantum key distribution in the presence of untrusted noise. We explain the
effect by behaviour of the Holevo quantity, which describes the information
leakage, and is effectively minimized by the squeezed states.Comment: 14 pages, 7 figure
Real-time full bandwidth measurement of spectral noise in supercontinuum generation
The ability to measure real-time fluctuations of ultrashort pulses
propagating in optical fiber has provided significant insights into fundamental
dynamical effects such as modulation instability and the formation of
frequency-shifting rogue wave solitons. We report here a detailed study of
real-time fluctuations across the full bandwidth of a fiber supercontinuum
which directly reveals the significant variation in measured noise statistics
across the spectrum, and which allows us to study correlations between widely
separated spectral components. For two different propagation distances
corresponding to the onset phase of spectral broadening and the fully-developed
supercontinuum, we measure real time noise across the supercontinuum bandwidth,
and we quantify the supercontinuum noise using statistical higher-order moments
and a frequency-dependent intensity correlation map. We identify correlated
spectral regions within the supercontinuum associated with simultaneous
sideband generation, as well as signatures of pump depletion and soliton-like
pump dynamics. Experimental results are in excellent agreement with
simulations
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