838 research outputs found
Superqubits
We provide a supersymmetric generalization of n quantum bits by extending the
local operations and classical communication entanglement equivalence group
[SU(2)]^n to the supergroup [uOSp(1|2)]^n and the stochastic local operations
and classical communication equivalence group [SL(2,C)]^n to the supergroup
[OSp(1|2)]^n. We introduce the appropriate supersymmetric generalizations of
the conventional entanglement measures for the cases of and . In
particular, super-Greenberger-Horne-Zeilinger states are characterized by a
nonvanishing superhyperdeterminant.Comment: 16 pages, 4 figures, 4 tables, revtex; minor corrections, version
appearing in Phys. Rev.
Wrapped branes as qubits
Recent work has established a correspondence between the tripartite
entanglement measure of three qubits and the macroscopic entropy of the
four-dimensional 8-charge STU black hole of supergravity. Here we consider the
configurations of intersecting D3-branes, whose wrapping around the six compact
dimensions T^6 provides the microscopic string-theoretic interpretation of the
charges, and associate the three-qubit basis vectors |ABC>, (A,B,C=0 or 1) with
the corresponding 8 wrapping cycles. In particular, we relate a well-known fact
of quantum information theory, that the most general real three-qubit state can
be parameterized by four real numbers and an angle, to a well-known fact of
string theory, that the most general STU black hole can be described by four
D3-branes intersecting at an angle.Comment: Version appearing in Phys. Rev. Lett, includes Type IIA description
as well as Type II
Miss Hook Of Holland : Selection
https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/mmb-ps/1822/thumbnail.jp
Small Orbits
We study both the "large" and "small" U-duality charge orbits of extremal
black holes appearing in D = 5 and D = 4 Maxwell-Einstein supergravity theories
with symmetric scalar manifolds. We exploit a formalism based on cubic Jordan
algebras and their associated Freudenthal triple systems, in order to derive
the minimal charge representatives, their stabilizers and the associated
"moduli spaces". After recalling N = 8 maximal supergravity, we consider N = 2
and N = 4 theories coupled to an arbitrary number of vector multiplets, as well
as N = 2 magic, STU, ST^2 and T^3 models. While the STU model may be considered
as part of the general N = 2 sequence, albeit with an additional triality
symmetry, the ST^2 and T^3 models demand a separate treatment, since their
representative Jordan algebras are Euclidean or only admit non-zero elements of
rank 3, respectively. Finally, we also consider minimally coupled N = 2, matter
coupled N = 3, and "pure" N = 5 theories.Comment: 40 pages, 9 tables. References added. Expanded comments added to
sections III. C. 1. and III. F.
Four-qubit entanglement from string theory
We invoke the black hole/qubit correspondence to derive the classification of
four-qubit entanglement. The U-duality orbits resulting from timelike reduction
of string theory from D=4 to D=3 yield 31 entanglement families, which reduce
to nine up to permutation of the four qubits.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, 2 tables, revtex; minor corrections, references
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Can lightning be a noise source for a spherical gravitational wave antenna?
The detection of gravitational waves is a very active research field at the
moment. In Brazil the gravitational wave detector is called Mario SCHENBERG.
Due to its high sensitivity it is necessary to model mathematically all known
noise sources so that digital filters can be developed that maximize the
signal-to-noise ratio. One of the noise sources that must be considered are the
disturbances caused by electromagnetic pulses due to lightning close to the
experiment. Such disturbances may influence the vibrations of the antenna's
normal modes and mask possible gravitational wave signals. In this work we
model the interaction between lightning and SCHENBERG antenna and calculate the
intensity of the noise due to a close lightning stroke in the detected signal.
We find that the noise generated does not disturb the experiment significantly.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figure
Treatment of bone metastases from breast cancer with (3-amino-1-hydroxypropylidene)-1,1-bisphosphonate (APD).
Twenty-eight patients with progressive symptomatic bone metastases from breast cancer received (3-amino-1-hydroxypropylidene)-1,1-bisphosphonate (APD) 30 mg in 500 ml of 0.9% saline infused over 2 h every 14 days. No other systemic therapy for breast cancer was prescribed. All patients had progressed on at least one previous systemic treatment. APD was continued until the disease progressed. Patients were assessed for objective response by the UICC criteria. In addition, subjective response was determined by a pain questionnaire. Radiological evidence of bone healing with sclerosis of lytic disease (UICC partial response) was seen in 4 patients. The median duration of response was 10 months. Eleven patients had stable disease for at least 3 months (median 5 months) and 9 progressed. Symptomatic response occurred in 9 patients and 12 reported an improvement in quality of life. Treatment was tolerated well with no significant toxicity. In conclusion, long-term inhibition of bone destruction is possible with APD therapy alone and both subjective and objective responses are seen
Biochemical prediction of response of bone metastases to treatment.
Assessment of response of skeletal metastases to systemic therapy is currently dependent on radiological evidence of bone healing. We have performed a prospective study of additional response criteria in patients with progressive bone metastases from breast cancer. Changes in these potential markers of response were correlated with the radiological response and the time to treatment failure (TTF). Successful systemic therapy typically led to a transient increase in osteoblast activity ('flare'), a reduction in osteoclast activity and symptomatic improvement. After 1 month a greater than 10% rise in serum osteocalcin (BGP) and alkaline phosphatase bone isoenzyme (ALP-BI) and a greater than 10% fall in urinary calcium excretion were seen in 14/16 patients with radiographic evidence of bone healing (UICC partial responders). In comparison similar biochemical changes at 1 month were seen in only 4/20 patients with progressive disease (P less than 0.001). The predictive value and diagnostic efficiency (DE) of changes at 1 month in biochemical measurements and symptom score has been calculated. The combination of a greater than 10% rise in ALPBI and BGP and a greater than 10% fall in urinary calcium excretion had a DE of 89% for discriminating response from progression, 88% for response from non-response (progressing + no change patients), and 76% for TTF of greater than 6 months from TTF of less than 6 months. Serum calcium, tartrate resistant acid phosphatase (TRP), urinary hydroxyproline excretion and bone scan changes were unhelpful in discriminating between patient groups. Independent confirmation is needed, but our results suggest there are reliable alternatives to plain radiography in the early assessment of response of bone metastases to treatment
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