16,173 research outputs found

    On global location-domination in graphs

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    A dominating set SS of a graph GG is called locating-dominating, LD-set for short, if every vertex vv not in SS is uniquely determined by the set of neighbors of vv belonging to SS. Locating-dominating sets of minimum cardinality are called LDLD-codes and the cardinality of an LD-code is the location-domination number λ(G)\lambda(G). An LD-set SS of a graph GG is global if it is an LD-set of both GG and its complement G‾\overline{G}. The global location-domination number λg(G)\lambda_g(G) is the minimum cardinality of a global LD-set of GG. In this work, we give some relations between locating-dominating sets and the location-domination number in a graph and its complement.Comment: 15 pages: 2 tables; 8 figures; 20 reference

    Confinement-induced resonances for a two-component ultracold atom gas in arbitrary quasi-one-dimensional traps

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    We solve the two-particle s-wave scattering problem for ultracold atom gases confined in arbitrary quasi-one-dimensional trapping potentials, allowing for two different atom species. As a consequence, the center-of-mass and relative degrees of freedom do not factorize. We derive bound-state solutions and obtain the general scattering solution, which exhibits several resonances in the 1D scattering length induced by the confinement. We apply our formalism to two experimentally relevant cases: (i) interspecies scattering in a two-species mixture, and (ii) the two-body problem for a single species in a non-parabolic trap.Comment: 22 pages, 3 figure

    Extremal Graph Theory for Metric Dimension and Diameter

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    A set of vertices SS \emph{resolves} a connected graph GG if every vertex is uniquely determined by its vector of distances to the vertices in SS. The \emph{metric dimension} of GG is the minimum cardinality of a resolving set of GG. Let Gβ,D\mathcal{G}_{\beta,D} be the set of graphs with metric dimension β\beta and diameter DD. It is well-known that the minimum order of a graph in Gβ,D\mathcal{G}_{\beta,D} is exactly β+D\beta+D. The first contribution of this paper is to characterise the graphs in Gβ,D\mathcal{G}_{\beta,D} with order β+D\beta+D for all values of β\beta and DD. Such a characterisation was previously only known for D≤2D\leq2 or β≤1\beta\leq1. The second contribution is to determine the maximum order of a graph in Gβ,D\mathcal{G}_{\beta,D} for all values of DD and β\beta. Only a weak upper bound was previously known

    Universal resources for approximate and stochastic measurement-based quantum computation

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    We investigate which quantum states can serve as universal resources for approximate and stochastic measurement-based quantum computation, in the sense that any quantum state can be generated from a given resource by means of single-qubit (local) operations assisted by classical communication. More precisely, we consider the approximate and stochastic generation of states, resulting e.g. from a restriction to finite measurement settings or from possible imperfections in the resources or local operations. We show that entanglement-based criteria for universality obtained for the exact, deterministic case can be lifted to the much more general approximate, stochastic case, moving from the idealized situation considered in previous works, to the practically relevant context of non-perfect state preparation. We find that any entanglement measure fulfilling some basic requirements needs to reach its maximum value on some element of an approximate, stochastic universal family of resource states, as the resource size grows. This allows us to rule out various families of states as being approximate, stochastic universal. We provide examples of resources that are efficient approximate universal, but not exact deterministic universal. We also study the robustness of universal resources for measurement-based quantum computation under realistic assumptions about the (imperfect) generation and manipulation of entangled states, giving an explicit expression for the impact that errors made in the preparation of the resource have on the possibility to use it for universal approximate and stochastic state preparation. Finally, we discuss the relation between our entanglement-based criteria and recent results regarding the uselessness of states with a high degree of geometric entanglement as universal resources.Comment: 17 pages; abstract shortened with respect to the published version to respect the arXiv limit of 1,920 character

    Superconducting transport through a vibrating molecule

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    Nonequilibrium electronic transport through a molecular level weakly coupled to a single coherent phonon/vibration mode has been studied for superconducting leads. The Keldysh Green function formalism is used to compute the current for the entire bias voltage range. In the subgap regime, Multiple Andreev Reflection (MAR) processes accompanied by phonon emission cause rich structure near the onset of MAR channels, including an even-odd parity effect that can be interpreted in terms of an inelastic MAR ladder picture. Thereby we establish a connection between the Keldysh formalism and the Landauer scattering approach for inelastic MAR.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, version contains now more details, accepted by PR
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