519 research outputs found
Quantum Entanglement Capacity with Classical Feedback
For any quantum discrete memoryless channel, we define a quantity called
quantum entanglement capacity with classical feedback (), and we show that
this quantity lies between two other well-studied quantities. These two
quantities - namely the quantum capacity assisted by two-way classical
communication () and the quantum capacity with classical feedback ()
- are widely conjectured to be different: there exists quantum discrete
memoryless channel for which . We then present a general scheme to
convert any quantum error-correcting codes into adaptive protocols for this
newly-defined quantity of the quantum depolarizing channel, and illustrate with
Cat (repetition) code and Shor code. We contrast the present notion with
entanglement purification protocols by showing that whilst the Leung-Shor
protocol can be applied directly, recurrence methods need to be supplemented
with other techniques but at the same time offer a way to improve the
aforementioned Cat code. For the quantum depolarizing channel, we prove a
formula that gives lower bounds on the quantum capacity with classical feedback
from any protocols. We then apply this formula to the protocols
that we discuss to obtain new lower bounds on the quantum capacity with
classical feedback of the quantum depolarizing channel
Improving zero-error classical communication with entanglement
Given one or more uses of a classical channel, only a certain number of
messages can be transmitted with zero probability of error. The study of this
number and its asymptotic behaviour constitutes the field of classical
zero-error information theory, the quantum generalisation of which has started
to develop recently. We show that, given a single use of certain classical
channels, entangled states of a system shared by the sender and receiver can be
used to increase the number of (classical) messages which can be sent with no
chance of error. In particular, we show how to construct such a channel based
on any proof of the Bell-Kochen-Specker theorem. This is a new example of the
use of quantum effects to improve the performance of a classical task. We
investigate the connection between this phenomenon and that of
``pseudo-telepathy'' games. The use of generalised non-signalling correlations
to assist in this task is also considered. In this case, a particularly elegant
theory results and, remarkably, it is sometimes possible to transmit
information with zero-error using a channel with no unassisted zero-error
capacity.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures. Version 2 is the same as the journal version plus
figure 1 and the non-signalling box exampl
Quantum information cannot be completely hidden in correlations: implications for the black-hole information paradox
The black-hole information paradox has fueled a fascinating effort to
reconcile the predictions of general relativity and those of quantum mechanics.
Gravitational considerations teach us that black holes must trap everything
that falls into them. Quantum mechanically the mass of a black hole leaks away
as featureless (Hawking) radiation, but if the black hole vanishes, where is
the information about the matter that made it? We treat the states of the
in-fallen matter quantum mechanically and show that the black-hole information
paradox becomes more severe. Our formulation of the paradox rules out one of
the most conservative resolutions: that the state of the in-falling matter
might be hidden in correlations between semi-classical Hawking radiation and
the internal states of the black hole. As a consequence, either unitarity or
Hawking's semi-classical predictions must break down. Any resolution of the
black-hole information crisis must elucidate one of these possibilities.Comment: We first obtained this result two years ag
The Silver Lining of Heart Disease: What Type of Patients Will Be More Likely to Experience It?
After successfully coping with a life threatening event, people tend to look at the brighter side of life.York's Knowledge Mobilization Unit provides services and funding for faculty, graduate students, and community organizations seeking to maximize the impact of academic research and expertise on public policy, social programming, and professional practice. It is supported by SSHRC and CIHR grants, and by the Office of the Vice-President Research & Innovation.
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www.researchimpact.c
Continuous variable private quantum channel
In this paper we introduce the concept of quantum private channel within the
continuous variables framework (CVPQC) and investigate its properties. In terms
of CVPQC we naturally define a "maximally" mixed state in phase space together
with its explicit construction and show that for increasing number of
encryption operations (which sets the length of a shared key between Alice and
Bob) the encrypted state is arbitrarily close to the maximally mixed state in
the sense of the Hilbert-Schmidt distance. We bring the exact solution for the
distance dependence and give also a rough estimate of the necessary number of
bits of the shared secret key (i.e. how much classical resources are needed for
an approximate encryption of a generally unknown continuous-variable state).
The definition of the CVPQC is analyzed from the Holevo bound point of view
which determines an upper bound of information about an incoming state an
eavesdropper is able to get from his optimal measurement.Comment: upper bound on information Eve can get was revised and substantially
lowered (chapter IV), part of chapter III rewritten, several typos correcte
A Prediction Model to Diabetes using Artificial Metaplasticity
Diabetes is the most common disease nowadays in all populations and in all age groups. Different techniques of artificial intelligence has been applied to diabetes problem. This research proposed the artificial metaplasticity on multilayer perceptron (AMMLP) as prediction model for prediction of diabetes. The Pima Indians diabetes was used to test the proposed model AMMLP. The results obtained by AMMLP were compared with other algorithms, recently proposed by other researchers, that were applied to the same database. The best result obtained so far with the AMMLP algorithm is 89.93
Enrichment and mutation detection of circulating tumor cells from blood samples
The potential of circulating tumor cells (CTCs) in the diagnosis and prognosis of cancer patients has become increasingly attractive. However, molecular analysis of CTCs is hindered by low sensitivity and a high level of background leukocytes in CTC enrichment technologies. We have developed a novel protocol using a microfluidic device, which enriches and retrieves CTCs from blood samples. The principle of CTC capturing is that tumor cells are larger and less deformable than normal blood cells. To evaluate the potential of utilizing Celsee PREP100 in CTC molecular analysis, we prepared prostate cancer cell lines PC3 and LNCaP, retrieved the captured cells and analyzed them using PCR amplicon sequencing. We were able to recover an average of 79% of 110‑1,100 PC3 and 60‑1,500 LNCaP cells, and detect the p.K139fs*3 deletion of the p53 gene in PC3 cells and p.T877A mutation of the androgen receptor gene in LNCaP cells. Next, we spiked these two types of cells into normal donor blood samples, captured the cells and analyzed them using PCR amplicon sequencing. The PC3 and LNCaP cells were captured and retrieved with the ratio of captured CTCs to the background leukocytes reaching 1:1.5 for PC3 and 1:2.9 for LNCaP cells. We further revealed that the p.K139fs*3 deletion and p.T877A mutation can be detected in the captured PC3 and LNCaP cells, respectively. We successfully validated this approach using clinical blood samples from patients with metastatic prostate cancer. Our results demonstrated a novel approach for CTC enrichment and illustrated the potential of CTC molecular characterization for diagnosis, prognosis and treatment selection of patients with metastatic malignancy
Enrichment and mutation detection of circulating tumor cells from blood samples.
The potential of circulating tumor cells (CTCs) in the diagnosis and prognosis of cancer patients has become increasingly attractive. However, molecular analysis of CTCs is hindered by low sensitivity and a high level of background leukocytes in CTC enrichment technologies. We have developed a novel protocol using a microfluidic device, which enriches and retrieves CTCs from blood samples. The principle of CTC capturing is that tumor cells are larger and less deformable than normal blood cells. To evaluate the potential of utilizing Celsee PREP100 in CTC molecular analysis, we prepared prostate cancer cell lines PC3 and LNCaP, retrieved the captured cells and analyzed them using PCR amplicon sequencing. We were able to recover an average of 79% of 110‑1,100 PC3 and 60‑1,500 LNCaP cells, and detect the p.K139fs*3 deletion of the p53 gene in PC3 cells and p.T877A mutation of the androgen receptor gene in LNCaP cells. Next, we spiked these two types of cells into normal donor blood samples, captured the cells and analyzed them using PCR amplicon sequencing. The PC3 and LNCaP cells were captured and retrieved with the ratio of captured CTCs to the background leukocytes reaching 1:1.5 for PC3 and 1:2.9 for LNCaP cells. We further revealed that the p.K139fs*3 deletion and p.T877A mutation can be detected in the captured PC3 and LNCaP cells, respectively. We successfully validated this approach using clinical blood samples from patients with metastatic prostate cancer. Our results demonstrated a novel approach for CTC enrichment and illustrated the potential of CTC molecular characterization for diagnosis, prognosis and treatment selection of patients with metastatic malignancy
Challenging How English Is Done: Engaging the Ethical and the Human in a Community Literacies Seminar
Eight English graduate students and a professor reflect on their semesterlong exploration of community literacy studies. The students, some in a MFA Creative Writing program and some doing doctoral work in literature, rhetoric, or English Education, discuss how the community literacies lens unsettled their relationship to English Studies
Quantum Channel Capacity of Very Noisy Channels
We present a family of additive quantum error-correcting codes whose
capacities exceeds that of quantum random coding (hashing) for very noisy
channels. These codes provide non-zero capacity in a depolarizing channel for
fidelity parameters when . Random coding has non-zero capacity
only for ; by analogy to the classical Shannon coding limit, this
value had previously been conjectured to be a lower bound. We use the method
introduced by Shor and Smolin of concatenating a non-random (cat) code within a
random code to obtain good codes. The cat code with block size five is shown to
be optimal for single concatenation. The best known multiple-concatenated code
we found has a block size of 25. We derive a general relation between the
capacity attainable by these concatenation schemes and the coherent information
of the inner code states.Comment: 31 pages including epsf postscript figures. Replaced to correct
important typographical errors in equations 36, 37 and in tex
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