4,625 research outputs found

    Topological spin Hall states, charged skyrmions, and superconductivity in two dimensions

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    We study the properties of two dimensional topological spin hall insulators which arise through spontaneous breakdown of spin symmetry in systems that are spin rotation invariant. Such a phase breaks spin rotation but not time reversal symmetry and has a vector order parameter. Skyrmion configurations in this vector order parameter are shown to have electric charge that is twice the electron charge. When the spin Hall order is destroyed by condensation of skyrmions superconductivity results. This may happen either through doping or at fixed filling by tuning interactions to close the skyrmion gap. In the latter case the superconductor- spin Hall insulator quantum phase transition can be second order even though the two phases break distinct symmetries.Comment: 4 pages, typos corrected, added a footnot

    Quantum computers can search rapidly by using almost any transformation

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    A quantum computer has a clear advantage over a classical computer for exhaustive search. The quantum mechanical algorithm for exhaustive search was originally derived by using subtle properties of a particular quantum mechanical operation called the Walsh-Hadamard (W-H) transform. This paper shows that this algorithm can be implemented by replacing the W-H transform by almost any quantum mechanical operation. This leads to several new applications where it improves the number of steps by a square-root. It also broadens the scope for implementation since it demonstrates quantum mechanical algorithms that can readily adapt to available technology.Comment: This paper is an adapted version of quant-ph/9711043. It has been modified to make it more readable for physicists. 9 pages, postscrip

    Weak Mott insulators on the triangular lattice: possibility of a gapless nematic quantum spin liquid

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    We study the energetics of Gutzwiller projected BCS states of various symmetries for the triangular lattice antiferromagnet with a four particle ring exchange using variational Monte Carlo methods. In a range of parameters the energetically favored state is found to be a projected dx2−y2d_{x^2-y^2} paired state which breaks lattice rotational symmetry. We show that the properties of this nematic or orientationally ordered paired spin liquid state as a function of temperature and pressure can account for many of the experiments on organic materials. We also study the ring-exchange model with ferromagnetic Heisenberg exchange and find that amongst the studied ans\"atze, a projected f−f-wave state is the most favorable.Comment: Longer version, 7+ pages, 5 figure

    Scattering quantum random-walk search with errors

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    We analyze the realization of a quantum-walk search algorithm in a passive, linear optical network. The specific model enables us to consider the effect of realistic sources of noise and losses on the search efficiency. Photon loss uniform in all directions is shown to lead to the rescaling of search time. Deviation from directional uniformity leads to the enhancement of the search efficiency compared to uniform loss with the same average. In certain cases even increasing loss in some of the directions can improve search efficiency. We show that while we approach the classical limit of the general search algorithm by introducing random phase fluctuations, its utility for searching is lost. Using numerical methods, we found that for static phase errors the averaged search efficiency displays a damped oscillatory behaviour that asymptotically tends to a non-zero value.Comment: 10 pages, 10 figures. Two figures added for clarity, also made improvements to the tex

    Nested quantum search and NP-complete problems

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    A quantum algorithm is known that solves an unstructured search problem in a number of iterations of order d\sqrt{d}, where dd is the dimension of the search space, whereas any classical algorithm necessarily scales as O(d)O(d). It is shown here that an improved quantum search algorithm can be devised that exploits the structure of a tree search problem by nesting this standard search algorithm. The number of iterations required to find the solution of an average instance of a constraint satisfaction problem scales as dα\sqrt{d^\alpha}, with a constant α<1\alpha<1 depending on the nesting depth and the problem considered. When applying a single nesting level to a problem with constraints of size 2 such as the graph coloring problem, this constant α\alpha is estimated to be around 0.62 for average instances of maximum difficulty. This corresponds to a square-root speedup over a classical nested search algorithm, of which our presented algorithm is the quantum counterpart.Comment: 18 pages RevTeX, 3 Postscript figure

    A Study to Determine the In-service Needs of Vocational Education Teachers in the City of Chesapeake

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    The questions presented here will give specific meaning and direction to the problem under study. The data collected in this study will provide answers to these research questions: 1. What is meant by in-service education? 2. Are supervisors aware of teacher in-service needs? 3. Who should arrange in-service education sessions for vocational teachers? 4. What are the characteristics of an effective in-service program

    Vortex Phase Diagram of weakly pinned YBa2_2Cu3_3O7−δ_{7-\delta} for H ∥\parallel c

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    Vortex phase diagram in a weakly pinned crystal of YBCO for H ∥\parallel c is reviewed in the light of a recent elucidation of the process of `inverse melting' in a Bismuth cuprate system and the imaging of an interface between the ordered and the disordered regions across the peak effect in 2H-NbSe2_2. In the given YBCO crystal, a clear distinction can be made between the second magnetization peak (SMP) and the peak effect (PE) between 65 K and 75 K. The field region between the peak fields of the SMP (Hsmpm^m_{smp}) and the onset fields of the PE (Hpeon^{on}_{pe})is not only continuously connected to the Bragg glass phase at lower fields but it is also sandwiched between the higher temperature vortex liquid phase and the lower temperature vortex glass phase. Thus, an ordered vortex state between Hsmpm^m_{smp} and Hpeon^{on}_{pe} can get transformed to the (disordered) vortex liquid state on heating as well as to the (disordered) vortex glass state on cooling, a situation analogous to the thermal melting and the inverse melting phenomenon seen in a Bismuth cuprate.Comment: Presented in IWCC-200

    Comparison of Gravitational Wave Detector Network Sky Localization Approximations

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    Gravitational waves emitted during compact binary coalescences are a promising source for gravitational-wave detector networks. The accuracy with which the location of the source on the sky can be inferred from gravitational wave data is a limiting factor for several potential scientific goals of gravitational-wave astronomy, including multi-messenger observations. Various methods have been used to estimate the ability of a proposed network to localize sources. Here we compare two techniques for predicting the uncertainty of sky localization -- timing triangulation and the Fisher information matrix approximations -- with Bayesian inference on the full, coherent data set. We find that timing triangulation alone tends to over-estimate the uncertainty in sky localization by a median factor of 44 for a set of signals from non-spinning compact object binaries ranging up to a total mass of 20M⊙20 M_\odot, and the over-estimation increases with the mass of the system. We find that average predictions can be brought to better agreement by the inclusion of phase consistency information in timing-triangulation techniques. However, even after corrections, these techniques can yield significantly different results to the full analysis on specific mock signals. Thus, while the approximate techniques may be useful in providing rapid, large scale estimates of network localization capability, the fully coherent Bayesian analysis gives more robust results for individual signals, particularly in the presence of detector noise.Comment: 11 pages, 7 Figure

    Single-Step Quantum Search Using Problem Structure

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    The structure of satisfiability problems is used to improve search algorithms for quantum computers and reduce their required coherence times by using only a single coherent evaluation of problem properties. The structure of random k-SAT allows determining the asymptotic average behavior of these algorithms, showing they improve on quantum algorithms, such as amplitude amplification, that ignore detailed problem structure but remain exponential for hard problem instances. Compared to good classical methods, the algorithm performs better, on average, for weakly and highly constrained problems but worse for hard cases. The analytic techniques introduced here also apply to other quantum algorithms, supplementing the limited evaluation possible with classical simulations and showing how quantum computing can use ensemble properties of NP search problems.Comment: 39 pages, 12 figures. Revision describes further improvement with multiple steps (section 7). See also http://www.parc.xerox.com/dynamics/www/quantum.htm
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