1,964 research outputs found
Gluon-gluon contributions to the production of continuum diphoton pairs at hadron colliders
We compute the contributions to continuum photon pair production at hadron
colliders from processes initiated by gluon-gluon and gluon-quark scattering
into two photons through a four-leg virtual quark loop. Complete two-loop cross
sections in perturbative quantum chromodynamics are combined with contributions
from soft parton radiation resummed to all orders in the strong coupling
strength. The structure of the resummed cross section is examined in detail,
including a new type of unintegrated parton distribution function affecting
azimuthal angle distributions of photons in the pair's rest frame. As a result
of this analysis, we predict diphoton transverse momentum distributions in
gluon-gluon scattering in wide ranges of kinematic parameters at the Fermilab
Tevatron collider and the CERN Large Hadron Collider.Comment: 28 pages, 11 figures; published versio
Quantum Mechanics of Damped Systems II. Damping and Parabolic Potential Barrier
We investigate the resonant states for the parabolic potential barrier known
also as inverted or reversed oscillator. They correspond to the poles of
meromorphic continuation of the resolvent operator to the complex energy plane.
As a byproduct we establish an interesting relation between parabolic cylinder
functions (representing energy eigenfunctions of our system) and a class of
Gel'fand distributions used in our recent paper.Comment: 14 page
Simulating noisy quantum protocols with quantum trajectories
The theory of quantum trajectories is applied to simulate the effects of
quantum noise sources induced by the environment on quantum information
protocols. We study two models that generalize single qubit noise channels like
amplitude damping and phase flip to the many-qubit situation. We calculate the
fidelity of quantum information transmission through a chaotic channel using
the teleportation scheme with different environments. In this example, we
analyze the role played by the kind of collective noise suffered by the quantum
processor during its operation. We also investigate the stability of a quantum
algorithm simulating the quantum dynamics of a paradigmatic model of chaos, the
baker's map. Our results demonstrate that, using the quantum trajectories
approach, we are able to simulate quantum protocols in the presence of noise
and with large system sizes of more than 20 qubits.Comment: 11 pages, 7 fig
Relaxation and Localization in Interacting Quantum Maps
We quantise and study several versions of finite multibaker maps. Classically
these are exactly solvable K-systems with known exponential decay to global
equilibrium. This is an attempt to construct simple models of relaxation in
quantum systems. The effect of symmetries and localization on quantum transport
is discussed.Comment: 32 pages. LaTex file. 9 figures, not included. For figures send mail
to first author at '[email protected]
Frame Theory for Signal Processing in Psychoacoustics
This review chapter aims to strengthen the link between frame theory and
signal processing tasks in psychoacoustics. On the one side, the basic concepts
of frame theory are presented and some proofs are provided to explain those
concepts in some detail. The goal is to reveal to hearing scientists how this
mathematical theory could be relevant for their research. In particular, we
focus on frame theory in a filter bank approach, which is probably the most
relevant view-point for audio signal processing. On the other side, basic
psychoacoustic concepts are presented to stimulate mathematicians to apply
their knowledge in this field
Coin Tossing as a Billiard Problem
We demonstrate that the free motion of any two-dimensional rigid body
colliding elastically with two parallel, flat walls is equivalent to a billiard
system. Using this equivalence, we analyze the integrable and chaotic
properties of this new class of billiards. This provides a demonstration that
coin tossing, the prototypical example of an independent random process, is a
completely chaotic (Bernoulli) problem. The related question of which billiard
geometries can be represented as rigid body systems is examined.Comment: 16 pages, LaTe
Statistical Mechanics for Unstable States in Gel'fand Triplets and Investigations of Parabolic Potential Barriers
Free energies and other thermodynamical quantities are investigated in
canonical and grand canonical ensembles of statistical mechanics involving
unstable states which are described by the generalized eigenstates with complex
energy eigenvalues in the conjugate space of Gel'fand triplet. The theory is
applied to the systems containing parabolic potential barriers (PPB's). The
entropy and energy productions from PPB systems are studied. An equilibrium for
a chemical process described by reactions is also
discussed.Comment: 14 pages, AmS-LaTeX, no figur
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