6,957 research outputs found
Teleportation of the one-qubit state in decoherence environments
We study standard quantum teleportation of one-qubit state for the situation
in which the channel is subject to decoherence, and where the evolution of the
channel state is ruled by a master equation in the Lindblad form. A detailed
calculation reveals that the quality of teleportation is determined by both the
entanglement and the purity of the channel state, and only the optimal matching
of them ensures the highest fidelity of standard quantum teleportation. Also
our results demonstrated that the decoherence induces distortion of the Bloch
sphere for the output state with different rates in different directions, which
implies that different input states will be teleported with different
fidelities.Comment: 17 pages, 10 figure
Relations between entanglement, Bell-inequality violation and teleportation fidelity for the two-qubit X states
Based on the assumption that the receiver Bob can apply any unitary
transformation, Horodecki {\it et al.} [Phys. Lett. A {\bf 222}, 21 (1996)]
proved that any mixed two spin-1/2 state which violates the Bell-CHSH
inequality is useful for teleportation. Here, we further show that any X state
which violates the Bell-CHSH inequality can also be used for nonclassical
teleportation even if Bob can only perform the identity or the Pauli rotation
operations. Moreover, we showed that the maximal difference between the two
average fidelities achievable via Bob's arbitrary transformations and via the
sole identity or the Pauli rotation is 1/9.Comment: 5 pages, to be published in "Quantum Information Processing
Risk Management Capability Maturity and Performance of Complex Product and System (CoPS) Projects with an Asian Perspective
Complex Products and Systems (CoPS) are high value, technology and engineering-intensive capital goods. The motivation of this study is the persistent high failure rate of CoPS projects, Asian CoPS provider’s weak capability and lack of specific research on CoPS risk management. This paper evaluates risk management maturity level of CoPS projects against a general CoPS risk management capability maturity model (RM-CMM) developed by the authors. An Asian based survey was conducted to investigate the value of RM to project performance, and Asian (non-Japanese) CoPS implementers’ perceived application of RM practices, their strengths and weaknesses. The survey result shows that higher RM maturity level leads to higher CoPS project performance. It also shows project complexity and uncertainty moderates the relationship between some RM practices and project performance, which implies that a contingency approach should be adopted to manage CoPS risks effectively. In addition, it shows that Asian CoPS implementers are weak in RM process and there are also rooms for improvement in the softer aspects of organizational capabilities and robustness
Harnessing Electric Fields for Microfluidics – From Lightning Sparks to Tiny Tornadoes
The dominance of surface tension and viscous effects over body forces such as inertia, gravity or centrifugal force makes fluid actuation and particle manipulation at microscale dimensions extremely difficult. We demonstrate the possibility of exploiting electric fields to drive unstable turbulent-like flows for micromixing and complex flows for efficient particle separation and concentration. In particular, the ions resulting from the breakdown of air surrounding a theoretically singular sharp electrode tip due to corona discharge is employed to accelerate the air towards the surface of a liquid in a cylindrical microchamber. Through interfacial shear, the surface liquid layer is recirculated to produce a Batchelor-type flow within the chamber that spirals suspended colloidal particles to a stagnation point at the bottom no-slip plane. We show the use of this technology for rapid and efficient separation of red blood cells from plasma for the development of miniaturised point-of-care diagnostics. Such liquid flows also become unstable at high applied voltages and frequencies leading to the generation of vortices that span a cascade of length scales, which can be exploited for micromixing
Global spatial optimization with hydrological systems simulation: appliication to land-use allocation and peak runoff minimization
A general methodology is presented to integrate complex simulation models of hydrological systems into optimization models, as an alternative to scenario-based approaches. A gradient-based hill climbing algorithm is proposed to reach locally optimal solutions from distinct starting points. The gradient of the objective function is estimated numerically with the simulation model. A statistical procedure based on the Weibull distribution is used to build a confidence interval for the global optimum. The methodology is illustrated by an application to a small watershed in Ohio, where the decision variables are related to land-use allocations and the objective is to minimize peak runoff. The results suggest that this specific runoff function is convex in terms of the land-use variables, and that the global optimum has been reached. Modeling extensions and areas for further research are discussed
Extensional viscosity of copper nanowire suspensions in an aqueous polymer solution
Suspensions of copper nanowires are emerging as new electronic inks for
next-generation flexible electronics. Using a novel surface acoustic wave
driven extensional flow technique we are able to perform currently lacking
analysis of these suspensions and their complex buffer. We observe extensional
viscosities from 3 mPas (1 mPas shear viscosity) to 37.2
Pas via changes in the suspension concentration, thus capturing low
viscosities that have been historically very challenging to measure. These
changes equate to an increase in the relative extensional viscosity of nearly
12,200 times at a volume fraction of just 0.027. We also find that interactions
between the wires and the necessary polymer additive affect the rheology
strongly. Polymer-induced elasticity shows a reduction as the buffer relaxation
time falls from 819 to 59 s above a critical particle concentration. The
results and technique presented here should aid in the future formulation of
these promising nanowire suspensions and their efficient application as inks
and coatings.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, under review for Soft Matter RS
Solar Irradiance Variability is Caused by the Magnetic Activity on the Solar Surface
The variation in the radiative output of the Sun, described in terms of solar
irradiance, is important to climatology. A common assumption is that solar
irradiance variability is driven by its surface magnetism. Verifying this
assumption has, however, been hampered by the fact that models of solar
irradiance variability based on solar surface magnetism have to be calibrated
to observed variability. Making use of realistic three-dimensional
magnetohydrodynamic simulations of the solar atmosphere and state-of-the-art
solar magnetograms from the Solar Dynamics Observatory, we present a model of
total solar irradiance (TSI) that does not require any such calibration. In
doing so, the modeled irradiance variability is entirely independent of the
observational record. (The absolute level is calibrated to the TSI record from
the Total Irradiance Monitor.) The model replicates 95% of the observed
variability between April 2010 and July 2016, leaving little scope for
alternative drivers of solar irradiance variability at least over the time
scales examined (days to years).Comment: Supplementary Materials;
https://journals.aps.org/prl/supplemental/10.1103/PhysRevLett.119.091102/supplementary_material_170801.pd
Reconstruction of spectral solar irradiance since 1700 from simulated magnetograms
We present a reconstruction of the spectral solar irradiance since 1700 using
the SATIRE-T2 (Spectral And Total Irradiance REconstructions for the Telescope
era version 2) model. This model uses as input magnetograms simulated with a
surface flux transport model fed with semi-synthetic records of emerging
sunspot groups. We used statistical relationships between the properties of
sunspot group emergence, such as the latitude, area, and tilt angle, and the
sunspot cycle strength and phase to produce semi-synthetic sunspot group
records starting in the year 1700. The semisynthetic records are fed into a
surface flux transport model to obtain daily simulated magnetograms that map
the distribution of the magnetic flux in active regions (sunspots and faculae)
and their decay products on the solar surface. The magnetic flux emerging in
ephemeral regions is accounted for separately based on the concept of extended
cycles whose length and amplitude are linked to those of the sunspot cycles
through the sunspot number. The magnetic flux in each surface component
(sunspots, faculae and network, and ephemeral regions) was used to compute the
spectral and total solar irradiance between the years 1700 and 2009. This
reconstruction is aimed at timescales of months or longer although the model
returns daily values. We found that SATIRE-T2, besides reproducing other
relevant observations such as the total magnetic flux, reconstructs the total
solar irradiance (TSI) on timescales of months or longer in good agreement with
the PMOD composite of observations, as well as with the reconstruction starting
in 1878 based on the RGO-SOON data. The model predicts an increase in the TSI
of 1.2[+0.2, -0.3] Wm-2 between 1700 and the present. The spectral irradiance
reconstruction is in good agreement with the UARS/SUSIM measurements as well as
the Lyman-alpha composite.Comment: 13 pages, 10 figure
UV solar irradiance in observations and the NRLSSI and SATIRE-S models
Total solar irradiance and UV spectral solar irradiance have been monitored
since 1978 through a succession of space missions. This is accompanied by the
development of models aimed at replicating solar irradiance by relating the
variability to solar magnetic activity. The NRLSSI and SATIRE-S models provide
the most comprehensive reconstructions of total and spectral solar irradiance
over the period of satellite observation currently available. There is
persistent controversy between the various measurements and models in terms of
the wavelength dependence of the variation over the solar cycle, with
repercussions on our understanding of the influence of UV solar irradiance
variability on the stratosphere. We review the measurement and modelling of UV
solar irradiance variability over the period of satellite observation. The
SATIRE-S reconstruction is consistent with spectral solar irradiance
observations where they are reliable. It is also supported by an independent,
empirical reconstruction of UV spectral solar irradiance based on UARS/SUSIM
measurements from an earlier study. The weaker solar cycle variability produced
by NRLSSI between 300 and 400 nm is not evident in any available record. We
show that although the method employed to construct NRLSSI is principally
sound, reconstructed solar cycle variability is detrimentally affected by the
uncertainty in the SSI observations it draws upon in the derivation. Based on
our findings, we recommend, when choosing between the two models, the use of
SATIRE-S for climate studies
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