12,807 research outputs found
Majorana-based fermionic quantum computation
Because Majorana zero modes store quantum information non-locally, they are
protected from noise, and have been proposed as a building block for a quantum
computer. We show how to use the same protection from noise to implement
universal fermionic quantum computation. Our architecture requires only two
Majoranas to encode a fermionic quantum degree of freedom, compared to
alternative implementations which require a minimum of four Majoranas for a
spin quantum degree of freedom. The fermionic degrees of freedom support both
unitary coupled cluster variational quantum eigensolver and quantum phase
estimation algorithms, proposed for quantum chemistry simulations. Because we
avoid the Jordan-Wigner transformation, our scheme has a lower overhead for
implementing both of these algorithms, and the simulation of Trotterized
Hubbard Hamiltonian in time per unitary step. We finally
demonstrate magic state distillation in our fermionic architecture, giving a
universal set of topologically protected fermionic quantum gates.Comment: 4 pages + 4 page appendix, 4 figures, 2 table
Using Intelligent Agents to Manage Business Processes
This paper describes work undertaken in the ADEPT (Advanced Decision Environment for Process Tasks) project towards developing an agent-based infrastructure for managing business processes. We describe how the key technology of negotiating, service providing, autonomous agents was realised and demonstrate how this was applied to the BT business process of providing a customer quote for network services
A Construction of Solutions to Reflection Equations for Interaction-Round-a-Face Models
We present a procedure in which known solutions to reflection equations for
interaction-round-a-face lattice models are used to construct new solutions.
The procedure is particularly well-suited to models which have a known fusion
hierarchy and which are based on graphs containing a node of valency . Among
such models are the Andrews-Baxter-Forrester models, for which we construct
reflection equation solutions for fixed and free boundary conditions.Comment: 9 pages, LaTe
Illness in Returned Travelers and Immigrants/Refugees: The 6-Year Experience of Two Australian Infectious Diseases Units.
BACKGROUND: Data comparing returned travelers and immigrants/refugees managed in a hospital setting is lacking. METHODS: We prospectively collected data on 1,106 patients with an illness likely acquired overseas who presented to two hospital-based Australian infectious diseases units over a 6-year period. RESULTS: Eighty-three percent of patients were travelers and 17% immigrants/refugees. In travelers, malaria (19%), gastroenteritis/diarrhea (15%), and upper respiratory tract infection (URTI) (7%) were the most common diagnoses. When compared with immigrants/refugees, travelers were significantly more likely to be diagnosed with gastroenteritis/diarrhea [odds ratio (OR) 8], malaria (OR 7), pneumonia (OR 6), URTI (OR 3), skin infection, dengue fever, typhoid/paratyphoid fever, influenza, and rickettsial disease. They were significantly less likely to be diagnosed with leprosy (OR 0.03), chronic hepatitis (OR 0.04), tuberculosis (OR 0.05), schistosomiasis (OR 0.3), and helminthic infection (OR 0.3). In addition, travelers were more likely to present within 1 month of entry into Australia (OR 96), and have fever (OR 8), skin (OR 6), gastrointestinal (OR 5), or neurological symptoms (OR 5) but were less likely to be asymptomatic (OR 0.1) or have anaemia (OR 0.4) or eosinophilia (OR 0.3). Diseases in travelers were more likely to have been acquired via a vector (OR 13) or food and water (OR 4), and less likely to have been acquired via the respiratory (OR 0.2) or skin (OR 0.6) routes. We also found that travel destination and classification of traveler can significantly influence the likelihood of a specific diagnosis in travelers. Six percent of travelers developed a potentially vaccine-preventable disease, with failure to vaccinate occurring in 31% of these cases in the pretravel medical consultation. CONCLUSIONS: There are important differences in the spectrum of illness, clinical features, and mode of disease transmission between returned travelers and immigrants/refugees presenting to hospital-based Australian infectious diseases units with an illness acquired overseas
Violation of the Leggett-Garg inequality with weak measurements of photons
By weakly measuring the polarization of a photon between two strong
polarization measurements, we experimentally investigate the correlation
between the appearance of anomalous values in quantum weak measurements, and
the violation of realism and non-intrusiveness of measurements. A quantitative
formulation of the latter concept is expressed in terms of a Leggett-Garg
inequality for the outcomes of subsequent measurements of an individual quantum
system. We experimentally violate the Leggett-Garg inequality for several
measurement strengths. Furthermore, we experimentally demonstrate that there is
a one-to-one correlation between achieving strange weak values and violating
the Leggett-Garg inequality.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
“I wish I’d told them”: a qualitative study examining the unmet psychosexual needs of prostate cancer patients during follow-up after treatment
<b>Objective</b> To gain insight into patients' experiences of follow-up care after treatment for prostate cancer and identify unmet psychosexual needs.<p></p>
<b>Methods</b> Semi-structured interviews were conducted with a purposive sample of 35 patients aged 59-82 from three UK regions. Partners were included in 18 interviews. Data were analyzed using constant comparison. <p></p>
<b>Results</b> (1) Psychosexual problems gained importance over time, (2) men felt they were rarely invited to discuss psychosexual side effects within follow-up appointments and lack of rapport with health care professionals made it difficult to raise problems themselves, (3) problems were sometimes concealed or accepted and professionals' attempts to explore potential difficulties were resisted by some, and (4) older patients were too embarrassed to raise psychosexual concerns as they felt they would be considered 'too old' to be worried about the loss of sexual function.<p></p>
<b>Conclusion</b> Men with prostate cancer, even the very elderly, have psychosexual issues for variable times after diagnosis. These are not currently always addressed at the appropriate time for the patient.Practice implications Assessments of psychosexual problems should take place throughout the follow-up period, and not only at the time of initial treatment. Further research examining greater willingness or reluctance to engage with psychosexual interventions may be particularly helpful in designing future intervention
Incoherent transient radio emission from stellar-mass compact objects in the SKA era
The universal link between the processes of accretion and ejection leads to
the formation of jets and outflows around accreting compact objects. Incoherent
synchrotron emission from these outflows can be observed from a wide range of
accreting binaries, including black holes, neutron stars, and white dwarfs.
Monitoring the evolution of the radio emission during their sporadic outbursts
provides important insights into the launching of jets, and, when coupled with
the behaviour of the source at shorter wavelengths, probes the underlying
connection with the accretion process. Radio observations can also probe the
impact of jets/outflows (including other explosive events such as magnetar
giant flares) on the ambient medium, quantifying their kinetic feedback.
The high sensitivity of the SKA will open up new parameter space, enabling
the monitoring of accreting stellar-mass compact objects from their bright,
Eddington-limited outburst states down to the lowest-luminosity quiescent
levels, whose intrinsic faintness has to date precluded detailed studies. A
census of quiescently accreting black holes will also constrain binary
evolution processes. By enabling us to extend our existing investigations of
black hole jets to the fainter jets from neutron star and white dwarf systems,
the SKA will permit comparative studies to determine the role of the compact
object in jet formation. The high sensitivity, wide field of view and
multi-beaming capability of the SKA will enable the detection and monitoring of
all bright flaring transients in the observable local Universe, including the
ULXs, ...
[Abridged]
This chapter reviews the science goals outlined above, demonstrating the
progress that will be made by the SKA. We also discuss the potential of the
astrometric and imaging observations that would be possible should a
significant VLBI component be included in the SKA.Comment: To be published in: "Advancing Astrophysics with the Square Kilometre
Array", Proceedings of Science, PoS(AASKA14
Early multi-wavelength emission from Gamma-ray Bursts: from Gamma-ray to X-ray
The study of the early high-energy emission from both long and short
Gamma-ray bursts has been revolutionized by the Swift mission. The rapid
response of Swift shows that the non-thermal X-ray emission transitions
smoothly from the prompt phase into a decaying phase whatever the details of
the light curve. The decay is often categorized by a steep-to-shallow
transition suggesting that the prompt emission and the afterglow are two
distinct emission components. In those GRBs with an initially steeply-decaying
X-ray light curve we are probably seeing off-axis emission due to termination
of intense central engine activity. This phase is usually followed, within the
first hour, by a shallow decay, giving the appearance of a late emission hump.
The late emission hump can last for up to a day, and hence, although faint, is
energetically very significant. The energy emitted during the late emission
hump is very likely due to the forward shock being constantly refreshed by
either late central engine activity or less relativistic material emitted
during the prompt phase. In other GRBs the early X-ray emission decays
gradually following the prompt emission with no evidence for early temporal
breaks, and in these bursts the emission may be dominated by classical
afterglow emission from the external shock as the relativistic jet is slowed by
interaction with the surrounding circum-burst medium. At least half of the GRBs
observed by Swift also show erratic X-ray flaring behaviour, usually within the
first few hours. The properties of the X-ray flares suggest that they are due
to central engine activity. Overall, the observed wide variety of early
high-energy phenomena pose a major challenge to GRB models.Comment: Accepted for publication in the New Journal of Physics focus issue on
Gamma Ray Burst
An Atlas of Computed Equivalent Widths of Quasar Broad Emission Lines
We present graphically the results of several thousand photoionization
calculations of broad emission line clouds in quasars, spanning seven orders of
magnitude in hydrogen ionizing flux and particle density. The equivalent widths
of 42 quasar emission lines are presented as contours in the particle density -
ionizing flux plane for a typical incident continuum shape, solar chemical
abundances, and cloud column density of . Results are
similarly given for a small subset of emission lines for two other column
densities ( and ), five other incident
continuum shapes, and a gas metallicity of 5 \Zsun. These graphs should prove
useful in the analysis of quasar emission line data and in the detailed
modeling of quasar broad emission line regions. The digital results of these
emission line grids and many more are available over the Internet.Comment: 16 pages, LaTeX (AASTeX aaspp4.sty); to appear in the 1997 ApJS: full
contents of the 9 photoionization grids presented in this paper may be found
at http://www.pa.uky.edu/~korista/grids/grids.htm
Chirality blockade of Andreev reflection in a magnetic Weyl semimetal
A Weyl semimetal with broken time-reversal symmetry has a minimum of two
species of Weyl fermions, distinguished by their opposite chirality, in a pair
of Weyl cones at opposite momenta that are displaced in the direction
of the magnetization. Andreev reflection at the interface between a Weyl
semimetal in the normal state (N) and a superconductor (S) that pairs
must involve a switch of chirality, otherwise it is blocked. We show that this
"chirality blockade" suppresses the superconducting proximity effect when the
magnetization lies in the plane of the NS interface. A Zeeman field at the
interface can provide the necessary chirality switch and activate Andreev
reflection.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figures. V2: added investigation of the dependence of the
chirality blockade on the direction of the magnetization and (Appendix C)
calculations of the Fermi-arc mediated Josephson effec
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