742 research outputs found
Lead pollution and its sources along the Turkish coast of the Black Sea
Lead pollution and its sources have been investigated in the south-eastern and south-western Black Sea. Surficial sediments and mussels were collected in different seasons of the year from the south-eastern and south-western Black Sea and analysed for their lead contents.In the south-eastern Black Sea sediments from the easternmost and from the central stations contained the highest lead concentrations. Sediments contained 8 to 10 times the lead concentrations of sediments from the south-west. Samples taken from rivers, streams and effluents had especially high lead concentrations. The highest lead concentrations were found in sediments collected in October and December.Lead concentrations in mussels from the south-eastern coast were comparatively lower compared to those from the south-western coast. The highest average values occurred in December and in October.In the south-western Black Sea, the highest lead concentrations in sediments were obtained in those from Inebolu, followed by those from around Zonguldak. The concentrations increased from the middle to the west of the southern Black Sea coast, possibly due to the effect of the Danube River. Sediments taken in September had the highest lead concentrations, followed by samples taken in December.Very high lead concentrations (> 10 μ g g-1) were observed in mussels from those stations where the sediments also contained high concentrations. Mussels had their highest lead concentrations in January and April
Twisted Supersymmetric Gauge Theories and Orbifold Lattices
We examine the relation between twisted versions of the extended
supersymmetric gauge theories and supersymmetric orbifold lattices. In
particular, for the SYM in , we show that the continuum
limit of orbifold lattice reproduces the twist introduced by Marcus, and the
examples at lower dimensions are usually Blau-Thompson type. The orbifold
lattice point group symmetry is a subgroup of the twisted Lorentz group, and
the exact supersymmetry of the lattice is indeed the nilpotent scalar
supersymmetry of the twisted versions. We also introduce twisting in terms of
spin groups of finite point subgroups of -symmetry and spacetime symmetry.Comment: 32 page
On the Complexity of Generalized Discrete Logarithm Problem
Generalized Discrete Logarithm Problem (GDLP) is an extension of the Discrete
Logarithm Problem where the goal is to find such for a given . Generalized discrete logarithm is
similar but instead of a single base element, uses a number of base elements
which does not necessarily commute with each other. In this paper, we prove
that GDLP is NP-hard for symmetric groups. Furthermore, we prove that GDLP
remains NP-hard even when the base elements are permutations of at most 3
elements. Lastly, we discuss the implications and possible implications of our
proofs in classical and quantum complexity theory
Quantum Adversarial Learning in Emulation of Monte-Carlo Methods for Max-cut Approximation: QAOA is not optimal
One of the leading candidates for near-term quantum advantage is the class of
Variational Quantum Algorithms, but these algorithms suffer from classical
difficulty in optimizing the variational parameters as the number of parameters
increases. Therefore, it is important to understand the expressibility and
power of various ans\"atze to produce target states and distributions. To this
end, we apply notions of emulation to Variational Quantum Annealing and the
Quantum Approximate Optimization Algorithm (QAOA) to show that QAOA is
outperformed by variational annealing schedules with equivalent numbers of
parameters. Our Variational Quantum Annealing schedule is based on a novel
polynomial parameterization that can be optimized in a similar gradient-free
way as QAOA, using the same physical ingredients. In order to compare the
performance of ans\"atze types, we have developed statistical notions of
Monte-Carlo methods. Monte-Carlo methods are computer programs that generate
random variables that approximate a target number that is computationally hard
to calculate exactly. While the most well-known Monte-Carlo method is
Monte-Carlo integration (e.g. Diffusion Monte-Carlo or path-integral quantum
Monte-Carlo), QAOA is itself a Monte-Carlo method that finds good solutions to
NP-complete problems such as Max-cut. We apply these statistical Monte-Carlo
notions to further elucidate the theoretical framework around these quantum
algorithms
Circuit Transformations for Quantum Architectures
Quantum computer architectures impose restrictions on qubit interactions. We propose efficient circuit transformations that modify a given quantum circuit to fit an architecture, allowing for any initial and final mapping of circuit qubits to architecture qubits. To achieve this, we first consider the qubit movement subproblem and use the ROUTING VIA MATCHINGS framework to prove tighter bounds on parallel routing. In practice, we only need to perform partial permutations, so we generalize ROUTING VIA MATCHINGS to that setting. We give new routing procedures for common architecture graphs and for the generalized hierarchical product of graphs, which produces subgraphs of the Cartesian product. Secondly, for serial routing, we consider the TOKEN SWAPPING framework and extend a 4-approximation algorithm for general graphs to support partial permutations. We apply these routing procedures to give several circuit transformations, using various heuristic qubit placement subroutines. We implement these transformations in software and compare their performance for large quantum circuits on grid and modular architectures, identifying strategies that work well in practice
Deformed matrix models, supersymmetric lattice twists and N=1/4 supersymmetry
A manifestly supersymmetric nonperturbative matrix regularization for a
twisted version of N=(8,8) theory on a curved background (a two-sphere) is
constructed. Both continuum and the matrix regularization respect four exact
scalar supersymmetries under a twisted version of the supersymmetry algebra. We
then discuss a succinct Q=1 deformed matrix model regularization of N=4 SYM in
d=4, which is equivalent to a non-commutative orbifold lattice
formulation. Motivated by recent progress in supersymmetric lattices, we also
propose a N=1/4 supersymmetry preserving deformation of N=4 SYM theory on
. In this class of N=1/4 theories, both the regularized and continuum
theory respect the same set of (scalar) supersymmetry. By using the equivalence
of the deformed matrix models with the lattice formulations, we give a very
simple physical argument on why the exact lattice supersymmetry must be a
subset of scalar subalgebra. This argument disagrees with the recent claims of
the link approach, for which we give a new interpretation.Comment: 47 pages, 3 figure
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