26,514 research outputs found
Microwave-assisted cross-polarization of nuclear spin ensembles from optically-pumped nitrogen-vacancy centers in diamond
The ability to optically initialize the electronic spin of the
nitrogen-vacancy (NV) center in diamond has long been considered a valuable
resource to enhance the polarization of neighboring nuclei, but efficient
polarization transfer to spin species outside the diamond crystal has proven
challenging. Here we demonstrate variable-magnetic-field, microwave-enabled
cross-polarization from the NV electronic spin to protons in a model viscous
fluid in contact with the diamond surface. Slight changes in the
cross-relaxation rate as a function of the wait time between successive
repetitions of the transfer protocol suggest slower molecular diffusion near
the diamond surface compared to that in bulk, an observation consistent with
present models of the microscopic structure of a fluid close to a solid
interface.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure
Performance of a centrifugal pump running in inverse mode
This paper presents the functional characterization of a centrifugal pump used as a turbine. It shows the characteristics of the machine involved at several rotational speeds, comparing the respective flows and heads. In this way, it is possible to observe the influence of the rotational speed on efficiency, as well as obtaining the characteristics at constant head and runaway speed. Also, the forces actuating on the impeller were studied. An uncertainty analysis was made to assess the accuracy of the results. The research results indicate that the turbine characteristics can be predicted to some extent from the pump characteristics, that water flows out of the runner free of swirl flow at the best efficiency point, and that radial stresses are lower than in pump mode
The Alzheimer variant of Lewy body disease: A pathologically confirmed case-control study
The objective of the study was to identify clinical features that distinguish patients with dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB), who were classified as Alzheimer's disease ( AD) patients, from patients with AD. We examined a group of 27 patients from our memory clinic, originally diagnosed with AD, of whom 6 were postmortem found to have DLB. For the present study, we compared cognitive, noncognitive and neurological symptoms between the two groups. We found that there were no differences on ratings of dementia and scales for activities of daily living. Patients with DLB performed better on the MMSE and the memory subtest of the CAMCOG, but there was no difference in any other cognitive domain. Furthermore, genetic risk factors, including family history of dementia or allele frequency of the apolipoprotein epsilon 4, did not discriminate between the two groups, and there were no differences on CCT scans. Taken together, our findings suggest that Lewy body pathology may be present in patients who do not show the typical clinical features which distinguish DLB from AD. Copyright (C) 2005 S. Karger AG, Basel
Vibrations of micro-eV energies in nanocrystalline microstructures
The phonon density of states of nanocrystalline bcc Fe and nanocrystalline fcc Ni3Fe were measured by inelastic neutron scattering in two different ranges of energy. As has been reported previously, the nanocrystalline materials showed enhancements in their phonon density of states at energies from 2 to 15 meV, compared to control samples composed of large crystals. The present measurements were extended to energies in the micro-eV range, and showed significant, but smaller, enhancements in the number of modes in the energy range from 5 to 18 mueV. These modes of micro-eV energies provide a long-wavelength limit that bounds the fraction of modes at milli-eV energies originating with the cooperative dynamics of the nanocrystalline microstructure
On the probabilistic description of a multipartite correlation scenario with arbitrary numbers of settings and outcomes per site
We consistently formalize the probabilistic description of multipartite joint
measurements performed on systems of any nature. This allows us: (1) to specify
in probabilistic terms the difference between nonsignaling, the Einstein-
Podolsky-Rosen (EPR) locality and Bell's locality; (2) to introduce the notion
of an LHV model for an S_{1}x...xS_{N}-setting N-partite correlation
experiment, with outcomes of any spectral type, discrete or continuous, and to
prove both general and specific "quantum" statements on an LHV simulation in an
arbitrary multipartite case; (3) to classify LHV models for a multipartite
quantum state, in particular, to show that any N-partite quantum state, pure or
mixed, admits an Sx1x...x1 -setting LHV description; (4) to evaluate a
threshold visibility for a noisy bipartite quantum state to admit an S_{1}xS_
{2}-setting LHV description under any generalized quantum measurements of two
parties. In a sequel to this paper, we shall introduce a single general
representation incorporating in a unique manner all Bell-type inequalities for
either joint probabilities or correlation functions that have been introduced
or will be introduced in the literature.Comment: 26 pages; added section Conclusions and some references for section
Quasi-isometric classification of non-geometric 3-manifold groups
We describe the quasi-isometric classification of fundamental groups of
irreducible non-geometric 3-manifolds which do not have "too many" arithmetic
hyperbolic geometric components, thus completing the quasi-isometric
classification of 3--manifold groups in all but a few exceptional cases.Comment: Minor revision (added footnote in the Introduction
Parameterization dependence of T matrix poles and eigenphases from a fit to piN elastic scattering data
We compare fits to piN elastic scattering data, based on a Chew-Mandelstam
K-matrix formalism. Resonances, characterized by T-matrix poles, are compared
in fits generated with and without explicit Chew-Mandelstam K-matrix poles.
Diagonalization of the S matrix yields the eigenphase representation. While the
eigenphases can vary significantly for the different parameterizations, the
locations of most T-matrix poles are relatively stable.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, 1 tabl
Origin of fine structure of the giant dipole resonance in sd-shell nuclei
A set of high resolution zero-degree inelastic proton scattering data on
24Mg, 28Si, 32S, and 40Ca provides new insight into the long-standing puzzle of
the origin of fragmentation of the Giant Dipole Resonance (GDR) in sd-shell
nuclei. Understanding is provided by state-of-the-art theoretical Random Phase
Approximation (RPA) calculatios for deformed nuclei using for the first time a
realistic nucleon-nucleon interaction derived from the Argonne V18 potential
with the unitary correlation operator method and supplemented by a
phenomenological three-nucleon contact interaction. A wavelet analysis allows
to extract significant scales both in the data and calculations characterizing
the fine structure of the GDR. The fair agreement supports that the fine
structure arises from ground-state deformation driven by alpha clustering.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figure
Quantum rejection sampling
Rejection sampling is a well-known method to sample from a target
distribution, given the ability to sample from a given distribution. The method
has been first formalized by von Neumann (1951) and has many applications in
classical computing. We define a quantum analogue of rejection sampling: given
a black box producing a coherent superposition of (possibly unknown) quantum
states with some amplitudes, the problem is to prepare a coherent superposition
of the same states, albeit with different target amplitudes. The main result of
this paper is a tight characterization of the query complexity of this quantum
state generation problem. We exhibit an algorithm, which we call quantum
rejection sampling, and analyze its cost using semidefinite programming. Our
proof of a matching lower bound is based on the automorphism principle which
allows to symmetrize any algorithm over the automorphism group of the problem.
Our main technical innovation is an extension of the automorphism principle to
continuous groups that arise for quantum state generation problems where the
oracle encodes unknown quantum states, instead of just classical data.
Furthermore, we illustrate how quantum rejection sampling may be used as a
primitive in designing quantum algorithms, by providing three different
applications. We first show that it was implicitly used in the quantum
algorithm for linear systems of equations by Harrow, Hassidim and Lloyd.
Secondly, we show that it can be used to speed up the main step in the quantum
Metropolis sampling algorithm by Temme et al.. Finally, we derive a new quantum
algorithm for the hidden shift problem of an arbitrary Boolean function and
relate its query complexity to "water-filling" of the Fourier spectrum.Comment: 19 pages, 5 figures, minor changes and a more compact style (to
appear in proceedings of ITCS 2012
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