5,616 research outputs found
Can Classical Noise Enhance Quantum Transmission?
A modified quantum teleportation protocol broadens the scope of the classical
forbidden-interval theorems for stochastic resonance. The fidelity measures
performance of quantum communication. The sender encodes the two classical bits
for quantum teleportation as weak bipolar subthreshold signals and sends them
over a noisy classical channel. Two forbidden-interval theorems provide a
necessary and sufficient condition for the occurrence of the nonmonotone
stochastic resonance effect in the fidelity of quantum teleportation. The
condition is that the noise mean must fall outside a forbidden interval related
to the detection threshold and signal value. An optimal amount of classical
noise benefits quantum communication when the sender transmits weak signals,
the receiver detects with a high threshold, and the noise mean lies outside the
forbidden interval. Theorems and simulations demonstrate that both
finite-variance and infinite-variance noise benefit the fidelity of quantum
teleportation.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures, replaced with published version that includes
new section on imperfect entanglement and references to J. J. Ting's earlier
wor
Late Wenlock (middle Silurian) bio-events: Caused by volatile boloid impact/s
Late Wenlockian (late mid-Silurian) life is characterized by three significant changes or bioevents: sudden development of massive carbonate reefs after a long interval of limited reef growth; sudden mass mortality among colonial zooplankton, graptolites; and origination of land plants with vascular tissue (Cooksonia). Both marine bioevents are short in duration and occur essentially simultaneously at the end of the Wenlock without any recorded major climatic change from the general global warm climate. These three disparate biologic events may be linked to sudden environmental change that could have resulted from sudden infusion of a massive amount of ammonia into the tropical ocean. Impact of a boloid or swarm of extraterrestrial bodies containing substantial quantities of a volatile (ammonia) component could provide such an infusion. Major carbonate precipitation (formation), as seen in the reefs as well as, to a more limited extent, in certain brachiopods, would be favored by increased pH resulting from addition of a massive quantity of ammonia into the upper ocean. Because of the buffer capacity of the ocean and dilution effects, the pH would have returned soon to equilibrium. Major proliferation of massive reefs ceased at the same time. Addition of ammonia as fertilizer to terrestrial environments in the tropics would have created optimum environmental conditions for development of land plants with vascular, nutrient-conductive tissue. Fertilization of terrestrial environments thus seemingly preceded development of vascular tissue by a short time interval. Although no direct evidence of impact of a volatile boloid may be found, the bioevent evidence is suggestive that such an impact in the oceans could have taken place. Indeed, in the case of an ammonia boloid, evidence, such as that of the Late Wenlockian bioevents may be the only available data for impact of such a boloid
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Thermal probe technology for buildings: the transition from laboratory to field measurements
This article reports the results of an investigation into the transfer of thermal probe measurement technology from laboratory use to actual buildings in order to undertake the in situ determination of thermal material properties. The imperative for using in situ measurements is 1) the impact of moisture content on thermal properties, 2) the possible wide range of variation of properties across most materials used in construction, and 3) the lack of data for new and innovative materials. Thermal probe technology offers the prospect of taking building specific data, addressing these issues. Based on commercially available thermal probes a portable measurement kit and accompanying measurement procedure have been developed. Three case study buildings, each having different materials, have been studied to ascertain whether or not the technique can be transferred to relatively uncontrolled environments while remaining capable of achieving a precision that is similar to an ASTM standard that can be related to thermal conductivity measurements of building materials. The results show that this is indeed the case, and that the use of thermal probe technology may yield thermal properties that vary significantly from the laboratory values currently used in building thermal engineering calculations
Stochastic resonance in Gaussian quantum channels
We determine conditions for the presence of stochastic resonance in a lossy
bosonic channel with a nonlinear, threshold decoding. The stochastic resonance
effect occurs if and only if the detection threshold is outside of a "forbidden
interval". We show that it takes place in different settings: when transmitting
classical messages through a lossy bosonic channel, when transmitting over an
entanglement-assisted lossy bosonic channel, and when discriminating channels
with different loss parameters. Moreover, we consider a setting in which
stochastic resonance occurs in the transmission of a qubit over a lossy bosonic
channel with a particular encoding and decoding. In all cases, we assume the
addition of Gaussian noise to the signal and show that it does not matter who,
between sender and receiver, introduces such a noise. Remarkably, different
results are obtained when considering a setting for private communication. In
this case the symmetry between sender and receiver is broken and the "forbidden
interval" may vanish, leading to the occurrence of stochastic resonance effects
for any value of the detection threshold.Comment: 17 pages, 6 figures. Manuscript improved in many ways. New results on
private communication adde
Identifying the quantum correlations in light-harvesting complexes
One of the major efforts in the quantum biological program is to subject
biological systems to standard tests or measures of quantumness. These tests
and measures should elucidate if non-trivial quantum effects may be present in
biological systems. Two such measures of quantum correlations are the quantum
discord and the relative entropy of entanglement. Here, we show that the
relative entropy of entanglement admits a simple analytic form when dynamics
and accessible degrees of freedom are restricted to a zero- and
single-excitation subspace. We also simulate and calculate the amount of
quantum discord that is present in the Fenna-Matthews-Olson protein complex
during the transfer of an excitation from a chlorosome antenna to a reaction
center. We find that the single-excitation quantum discord and relative entropy
of entanglement are equal for all of our numerical simulations, but a proof of
their general equality for this setting evades us for now. Also, some of our
simulations demonstrate that the relative entropy of entanglement without the
single-excitation restriction is much lower than the quantum discord. The first
picosecond of dynamics is the relevant timescale for the transfer of the
excitation, according to some sources in the literature. Our simulation results
indicate that quantum correlations contribute a significant fraction of the
total correlation during this first picosecond in many cases, at both cryogenic
and physiological temperature.Comment: 15 pages, 7 figures, significant improvements including (1) an
analytical formula for the single-excitation relative entropy of entanglement
(REE), (2) simulations indicating that the single-excitation REE is equal to
the single-excitation discord, and (3) simulations indicating that the full
REE can be much lower than the single-excitation RE
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