83,341 research outputs found
The Relational Blockworld Interpretation of Non-relativistic Quantum Mechanics
We introduce a new interpretation of non-relativistic quantum mechanics (QM) called Relational Blockworld (RBW). We motivate the interpretation by outlining two results due to Kaiser, Bohr, Ulfeck, Mottelson, and Anandan, independently. First, the canonical commutation relations for position and momentum can be obtained from boost and translation operators,respectively, in a spacetime where the relativity of simultaneity holds. Second, the QM density operator can be obtained from the spacetime symmetry group of the experimental configuration exclusively. We show how QM, obtained from relativistic quantum field theory per RBW, explains the twin-slit experiment and conclude by resolving the standard conceptual problems of QM, i.e., the measurement problem, entanglement and non-locality
NECROMASS PRODUCTION: STUDIES IN UNDISTURBED AND LOGGED AMAZON FORESTS
Necromass stocks account for up to 20% of carbon stored in tropical forests and have been estimated to be 14â19% of the annual aboveground carbon flux. Both stocks and fluxes of necromass are infrequently measured. In this study, we directly measured the production of fallen coarse necromass (â„2 cm diameter) during 4.5 years using repeated surveys in undisturbed forest areas and in forests subjected to reducedâimpact logging at the Tapajos National Forest, Belterra, Brazil (3.08° S, 54.94° W). We also measured fallen coarse necromass and standing dead stocks at two times during our study. The mean (SE) annual flux into the fallen coarse necromass pool in undisturbed forest of 6.7 (0.8) Mg·haâ1·yrâ1 was not significantly different from the flux under a reducedâimpact logging of 8.5 (1.3) Mg·haâ1·yrâ1. With the assumption of steady state, the instantaneous decomposition constants for fallen necromass in undisturbed forests were 0.12 yrâ1 for large, 0.33 yrâ1 for medium, and 0.47 yrâ1 for small size classes. The mass weighted decomposition constant was 0.15 yrâ1 for all fallen coarse necromass. Standing dead wood had a residence time of 4.2 years, and âŒ0.9 Mg·haâ1·yrâ1 of this pool was respired annually to the atmosphere through decomposition. Coarse necromass decomposition at our study site accounted for 12% of total carbon reâmineralization, and total aboveground coarse necromass was 14% of the aboveground biomass. Use of mortality rates to calculate production of coarse necromass leads to an underestimation of coarse necromass production by 45%, suggesting that nonlethal disturbance such as branch fall contributes significantly to this flux. Coarse necromass production is an important component of the tropical forest carbon cycle that has been neglected in most previous studies or erroneously estimated
An error accounting algorithm for electron counting experiments
Electron counting experiments attempt to provide a current of a known number
of electrons per unit time. We propose architectures utilizing a few readily
available electron-pumps or turnstiles with modest error rates of 1 part per
with common sensitive electrometers to achieve the desirable accuracy of
1 part in . This is achieved not by counting all transferred electrons
but by counting only the errors of individual devices; these are less frequent
and therefore readily recognized and accounted for. Our proposal thereby eases
the route towards quantum based standards for current and capacitance.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures. Builds on and extends white paper arXiv:0811.392
An L^2-Index Theorem for Dirac Operators on S^1 * R^3
An expression is found for the -index of a Dirac operator coupled to a
connection on a vector bundle over . Boundary
conditions for the connection are given which ensure the coupled Dirac operator
is Fredholm. Callias' index theorem is used to calculate the index when the
connection is independent of the coordinate on . An excision theorem due
to Gromov, Lawson, and Anghel reduces the index theorem to this special case.
The index formula can be expressed using the adiabatic limit of the
-invariant of a Dirac operator canonically associated to the boundary. An
application of the theorem is to count the zero modes of the Dirac operator in
the background of a caloron (periodic instanton).Comment: 14 pages, Latex, to appear in the Journal of Functional Analysi
Hilbert's projective metric in quantum information theory
We introduce and apply Hilbert's projective metric in the context of quantum
information theory. The metric is induced by convex cones such as the sets of
positive, separable or PPT operators. It provides bounds on measures for
statistical distinguishability of quantum states and on the decrease of
entanglement under LOCC protocols or other cone-preserving operations. The
results are formulated in terms of general cones and base norms and lead to
contractivity bounds for quantum channels, for instance improving Ruskai's
trace-norm contraction inequality. A new duality between distinguishability
measures and base norms is provided. For two given pairs of quantum states we
show that the contraction of Hilbert's projective metric is necessary and
sufficient for the existence of a probabilistic quantum operation that maps one
pair onto the other. Inequalities between Hilbert's projective metric and the
Chernoff bound, the fidelity and various norms are proven.Comment: 32 pages including 3 appendices and 3 figures; v2: minor changes,
published versio
- âŠ