15,820 research outputs found
Low-cost error mitigation by symmetry verification
We investigate the performance of error mitigation via measurement of
conserved symmetries on near-term devices. We present two protocols to measure
conserved symmetries during the bulk of an experiment, and develop a zero-cost
post-processing protocol which is equivalent to a variant of the quantum
subspace expansion. We develop methods for inserting global and local symetries
into quantum algorithms, and for adjusting natural symmetries of the problem to
boost their mitigation against different error channels. We demonstrate these
techniques on two- and four-qubit simulations of the hydrogen molecule (using a
classical density-matrix simulator), finding up to an order of magnitude
reduction of the error in obtaining the ground state dissociation curve.Comment: Published versio
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
Science materials for the gifted in grades two and three
Thesis (Ed.M.)--Boston Universit
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
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
Twisted Fermi surface of a thin-film Weyl semimetal
The Fermi surface of a conventional two-dimensional electron gas is
equivalent to a circle, up to smooth deformations that preserve the orientation
of the equi-energy contour. Here we show that a Weyl semimetal confined to a
thin film with an in-plane magnetization and broken spatial inversion symmetry
can have a topologically distinct Fermi surface that is twisted into a
\mbox{figure-8} opposite orientations are coupled at a crossing which is
protected up to an exponentially small gap. The twisted spectral response to a
perpendicular magnetic field is distinct from that of a deformed Fermi
circle, because the two lobes of a \mbox{figure-8} cyclotron orbit give
opposite contributions to the Aharonov-Bohm phase. The magnetic edge channels
come in two counterpropagating types, a wide channel of width and a narrow channel of width (with
the magnetic length and the momentum separation
of the Weyl points). Only one of the two is transmitted into a metallic
contact, providing unique magnetotransport signatures.Comment: V4: 10 pages, 14 figures. Added figure and discussion about
"uncrossing deformations" of oriented contours, plus minor corrections.
Published in NJ
Swift observations of the 2006 outburst of the recurrent nova RS Ophiuchi: II. 1D hydrodynamical models of wind driven shocks
Following the early Swift X-ray observations of the latest outburst of the
recurrent nova RS Ophiuchi in February 2006 (Paper I), we present new 1D
hydrodynamical models of the system which take into account all three phases of
the remnant evolution. The models suggest a novel way of modelling the system
by treating the outburst as a sudden increase then decrease in wind mass-loss
rate and velocity. The differences between this wind model and previous
Primakoff-type simulations are described. A more complex structure, even in 1D,
is revealed through the presence of both forward and reverse shocks, with a
separating contact discontinuity. The effects of radiative cooling are
investigated and key outburst parameters such as mass-loss rate, ejecta
velocity and mass are varied. The shock velocities as a function of time are
compared to the ones derived in Paper I. We show how the manner in which the
matter is ejected controls the evolution of the shock and that for a
well-cooled remnant, the shock deceleration rate depends on the amount of
energy that is radiated away.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figure
Habitat Use by the Eastern Sand Darter, Ammocrypta pellucida, in Two Lake Champlain Tributaries
The Eastern Sand Darter (Ammocrypta pellucida) is endangered or threatened throughout much of its range, which includes the St. Lawrence-Lake Ontario drainage of southern Ontario and Quebec and several Vermont tributaries of Lake Champlain. The species is known for its tendency to burrow, and field observations have suggested that habitat use may depend on substrate particle size. To determine whether Eastern Sand Darter densities were correlated with substrate particle size, fish and substrates were sampled in 156 plots in two Vermont rivers during the summers of 2001 and 2002. The Eastern Sand Darter occurred mainly in areas in which substrate composition was over 45% fine to medium sand (0.24-0.54 mm); they were much less abundant in areas in which substrate composition exceeded 25% particles greater than 1.9 mm. Substrate preference was tested by allowing 49 fish kept in aquaria to choose among four different substrates. The fish showed a significant preference (P < 0.005) for the finer substrate categories (0.24-0.54 mm, 0.55-1.0 mm), and mostly avoided the coarser substrates (1.0-1.9 mm, 2.0-4.1 mm). This suggests that the Eastern Sand Darter is selective regarding substrate composition, and therefore might be affected by fluctuations or changes in substrate composition within its habitat, such as those caused by changes in flow
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