240 research outputs found
Connes distance by examples: Homothetic spectral metric spaces
We study metric properties stemming from the Connes spectral distance on
three types of non compact noncommutative spaces which have received attention
recently from various viewpoints in the physics literature. These are the
noncommutative Moyal plane, a family of harmonic Moyal spectral triples for
which the Dirac operator squares to the harmonic oscillator Hamiltonian and a
family of spectral triples with Dirac operator related to the Landau operator.
We show that these triples are homothetic spectral metric spaces, having an
infinite number of distinct pathwise connected components. The homothetic
factors linking the distances are related to determinants of effective Clifford
metrics. We obtain as a by product new examples of explicit spectral distance
formulas. The results are discussed.Comment: 23 pages. Misprints corrected, references updated, one remark added
at the end of the section 3. To appear in Review in Mathematical Physic
An Obstruction to Quantization of the Sphere
In the standard example of strict deformation quantization of the symplectic
sphere , the set of allowed values of the quantization parameter
is not connected; indeed, it is almost discrete. Li recently constructed a
class of examples (including ) in which can take any value in an
interval, but these examples are badly behaved. Here, I identify a natural
additional axiom for strict deformation quantization and prove that it implies
that the parameter set for quantizing is never connected.Comment: 23 page. v2: changed sign conventio
Tools for Quantum Algorithms
We present efficient implementations of a number of operations for quantum
computers. These include controlled phase adjustments of the amplitudes in a
superposition, permutations, approximations of transformations and
generalizations of the phase adjustments to block matrix transformations. These
operations generalize those used in proposed quantum search algorithms.Comment: LATEX, 15 pages, Minor changes: one author's e-mail and one reference
numbe
Flight Gate Assignment with a Quantum Annealer
Optimal flight gate assignment is a highly relevant optimization problem from
airport management. Among others, an important goal is the minimization of the
total transit time of the passengers. The corresponding objective function is
quadratic in the binary decision variables encoding the flight-to-gate
assignment. Hence, it is a quadratic assignment problem being hard to solve in
general. In this work we investigate the solvability of this problem with a
D-Wave quantum annealer. These machines are optimizers for quadratic
unconstrained optimization problems (QUBO). Therefore the flight gate
assignment problem seems to be well suited for these machines. We use real
world data from a mid-sized German airport as well as simulation based data to
extract typical instances small enough to be amenable to the D-Wave machine. In
order to mitigate precision problems, we employ bin packing on the passenger
numbers to reduce the precision requirements of the extracted instances. We
find that, for the instances we investigated, the bin packing has little effect
on the solution quality. Hence, we were able to solve small problem instances
extracted from real data with the D-Wave 2000Q quantum annealer.Comment: Updated figure
Strict Deformation Quantization for a Particle in a Magnetic Field
Recently, we introduced a mathematical framework for the quantization of a
particle in a variable magnetic field. It consists in a modified form of the
Weyl pseudodifferential calculus and a C*-algebraic setting, these two points
of view being isomorphic in a suitable sense. In the present paper we leave
Planck's constant vary, showing that one gets a strict deformation quantization
in the sense of Rieffel. In the limit h --> 0 one recovers a Poisson algebra
induced by a symplectic form defined in terms of the magnetic field.Comment: 23 page
An Introduction to Quantum Computing for Non-Physicists
Richard Feynman's observation that quantum mechanical effects could not be simulated efficiently on a computer led to speculation that computation in general could be done more efficiently if it used quantum effects. This speculation appeared justified when Peter Shor described a polynomial time quantum algorithm for factoring integers. In quantum systems, the computational space increases exponentially with the size of the system which enables exponential parallelism. This parallelism could lead to exponentially faster quantum algorithms than possible classically. The catch is that accessing the results, which requires measurement, proves tricky and requires new non-traditional programming techniques. The aim of this paper is to guide computer scientists and other non-physicists through the conceptual and notational barriers that separate quantum computing from conventional computing. We introduce basic principles of quantum mechanics to explain where the power of quantum computers comes from and why it is difficult to harness. We describe quantum cryptography, teleportation, and dense coding. Various approaches to harnessing the power of quantum parallelism are explained, including Shor's algorithm, Grover's algorithm, and Hogg's algorithms. We conclude with a discussion of quantum error correction
Privacy-Preserving Aggregation of Time-Series Data
The conference paper can be viewed at: http://www.isoc.org/isoc/conferences/ndss/11/proceedings.shtmlSession 9: PrivacyWe consider how an untrusted data aggregator can
learn desired statistics over multiple participants’ data,
without compromising each individual’s privacy. We
propose a construction that allows a group of participants
to periodically upload encrypted values to a data
aggregator, such that the aggregator is able to compute
the sum of all participants’ values in every time period,
but is unable to learn anything else. We achieve strong
privacy guarantees using two main techniques. First, we
show how to utilize applied cryptographic techniques to
allow the aggregator to decrypt the sum from multiple
ciphertexts encrypted under different user keys. Second,
we describe a distributed data randomization procedure
that guarantees the differential privacy of the outcome
statistic, even when a subset of participants might be
compromised.published_or_final_versio
Leibniz Seminorms and Best Approximation from C*-subalgebras
We show that if B is a C*-subalgebra of a C*-algebra A such that B contains a
bounded approximate identity for A, and if L is the pull-back to A of the
quotient norm on A/B, then L is strongly Leibniz. In connection with this
situation we study certain aspects of best approximation of elements of a
unital C*-algebra by elements of a unital C*-subalgebra.Comment: 24 pages. Intended for the proceedings of the conference "Operator
Algebras and Related Topics". v2: added a corollary to the main theorem, plus
several minor improvements v3: much simplified proof of a key lemma,
corollary to main theorem added v4: Many minor improvements. Section numbers
increased by
Deformations of quantum field theories on de Sitter spacetime
Quantum field theories on de Sitter spacetime with global U(1) gauge symmetry
are deformed using the joint action of the internal symmetry group and a
one-parameter group of boosts. The resulting theory turns out to be wedge-local
and non-isomorphic to the initial one for a class of theories, including the
free charged Dirac field. The properties of deformed models coming from
inclusions of CAR-algebras are studied in detail.Comment: 26 pages, no figure
Unstable solitons on noncommutative tori and D-branes
We describe a class of exact solutions of super Yang-Mills theory on
even-dimensional noncommutative tori. These solutions generalize the solitons
on a noncommutative plane introduced in hep-th/0009142 that are conjectured to
describe unstable D2p-D0 systems. We show that the spectrum of quadratic
fluctuations around our solutions correctly reproduces the string spectrum of
the D2p-D0 system in the Seiberg-Witten decoupling limit. In particular the
fluctuations correctly reproduce the 0-0 string winding modes. For p=1 and p=2
we match the differences between the soliton energy and the energy of an
appropriate SYM BPS state with the binding energies of D2-D0 and D4-D0 systems.
We also give an example of a soliton that we conjecture describes branes of
intermediate dimension on a torus such as a D2-D4 system on a four-torus.Comment: 22 pages, Latex; v.2: references adde
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