33,739 research outputs found
Quantum broadcast communication
Broadcast encryption allows the sender to securely distribute his/her secret
to a dynamically changing group of users over a broadcast channel. In this
paper, we just consider a simple broadcast communication task in quantum
scenario, which the central party broadcasts his secret to multi-receiver via
quantum channel. We present three quantum broadcast communication schemes. The
first scheme utilizes entanglement swapping and Greenberger-Horne-Zeilinger
state to realize a task that the central party broadcasts his secret to a group
of receivers who share a group key with him. In the second scheme, based on
dense coding, the central party broadcasts the secret to multi-receiver who
share each of their authentication key with him. The third scheme is a quantum
broadcast communication scheme with quantum encryption, which the central party
can broadcast the secret to any subset of the legal receivers
Theoretical study of dislocation nucleation from simple surface defects in semiconductors
Large-scale atomistic calculations, using empirical potentials for modeling
semiconductors, have been performed on a stressed system with linear surface
defects like steps. Although the elastic limits of systems with surface defects
remain close to the theoretical strength, the results show that these defects
weaken the atomic structure, initializing plastic deformations, in particular
dislocations. The character of the dislocation nucleated can be predicted
considering both the resolved shear stress related to the applied stress
orientation and the Peierls stress. At low temperature, only glide events in
the shuffle set planes are observed. Then they progressively disappear and are
replaced by amorphization/melting zones at a temperature higher than 900 K
Evolution of InAs branches in InAs/GaAs nanowire heterostructures
Branched nanowireheterostructures of InAsâGaAs were observed during Au-assisted growth of InAs on GaAsnanowires. The evolution of these branches has been determined through detailed electron microscopy characterization with the following sequence: (1) in the initial stage of InAsgrowth, the Au droplet is observed to slide down the side of the GaAsnanowire, (2) the downward movement of Aunanoparticle later terminates when the nanoparticle encounters InAsgrowing radially on the GaAsnanowire sidewalls, and (3) with further supply of In and As vapor reactants, the Aunanoparticles assist the formation of InAs branches with a well-defined orientation relationship with GaAsâInAs core/shell stems. We anticipate that these observations advance the understanding of the kink formation in axial nanowireheterostructures.The Australian Research Council is acknowledged for
the financial support of this project. One of the authors
M.P. acknowledges the support of an International Postgraduate
Research Scholarship
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