1,329 research outputs found

    Euler characteristic and quadrilaterals of normal surfaces

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    Let MM be a compact 3-manifold with a triangulation Ď„\tau. We give an inequality relating the Euler characteristic of a surface FF normally embedded in MM with the number of normal quadrilaterals in FF. This gives a relation between a topological invariant of the surface and a quantity derived from its combinatorial description. Secondly, we obtain an inequality relating the number of normal triangles and normal quadrilaterals of FF, that depends on the maximum number of tetrahedrons that share a vertex in Ď„\tau.Comment: 7 pages, 1 figur

    Luminary 1B DAP preflight performance evaluation

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    Preflight analysis of LUMINARY 1B DAP simulation and performance testing for Apollo Mission H

    Field quantization for chaotic resonators with overlapping modes

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    Feshbach's projector technique is employed to quantize the electromagnetic field in optical resonators with an arbitray number of escape channels. We find spectrally overlapping resonator modes coupled due to the damping and noise inflicted by the external radiation field. For wave chaotic resonators the mode dynamics is determined by a non--Hermitean random matrix. Upon including an amplifying medium, our dynamics of open-resonator modes may serve as a starting point for a quantum theory of random lasing.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur

    A loss measurement system in a test facility for high-current superconducting cables and wires

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    The AC loss measurement system in the Twente test facility is operational. Preliminary results of the first loss measurements on a vacuum-welded conductor are presented. The Twente test facility is a high-current system in which superconductors can be tested up to 7 T and 25 kA. The loss measurements were done on a monolith conductor designed for TORE SUPRA, manufactured by Vacuumschmelze

    The role of the electromagnetic field in the formation of domains in the process of symmetry breaking phase transitions

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    In the framework of quantum field theory we discuss the emergence of a phase locking among the electromagnetic modes and the matter components on an extended space-time region. We discuss the formation of extended domains exhibiting in their fundamental states non-vanishing order parameters, whose existence is not included in the Lagrangian. Our discussion is motivated by the interest in the study of the general problem of the stability of mesoscopic and macroscopic complex systems arising from fluctuating quantum components in connection with the problem of defect formation during the process of non-equilibrium symmetry breaking phase transitions characterized by an order parameter.Comment: Physical Review A, in the pres

    Steady state entanglement in open and noisy quantum systems at high temperature

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    We show that quantum mechanical entanglement can prevail even in noisy open quantum systems at high temperature and far from thermodynamical equilibrium, despite the deteriorating effect of decoherence. The system consists of a number N of interacting quantum particles, and it can interact and exchange particles with some environment. The effect of decoherence is counteracted by a simple mechanism, where system particles are randomly reset to some standard initial state, e.g. by replacing them with particles from the environment. We present a master equation that describes this process, which we can solve analytically for small N. If we vary the interaction strength and the reset against decoherence rate, we find a threshold below which the equilibrium state is classically correlated, and above which there is a parameter region with genuine entanglement.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure

    A Study on the Noise Threshold of Fault-tolerant Quantum Error Correction

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    Quantum circuits implementing fault-tolerant quantum error correction (QEC) for the three qubit bit-flip code and five-qubit code are studied. To describe the effect of noise, we apply a model based on a generalized effective Hamiltonian where the system-environment interactions are taken into account by including stochastic fluctuating terms in the system Hamiltonian. This noise model enables us to investigate the effect of noise in quantum circuits under realistic device conditions and avoid strong assumptions such as maximal parallelism and weak storage errors. Noise thresholds of the QEC codes are calculated. In addition, the effects of imprecision in projective measurements, collective bath, fault-tolerant repetition protocols, and level of parallelism in circuit constructions on the threshold values are also studied with emphasis on determining the optimal design for the fault-tolerant QEC circuit. These results provide insights into the fault-tolerant QEC process as well as useful information for designing the optimal fault-tolerant QEC circuit for particular physical implementation of quantum computer.Comment: 9 pages, 9 figures; to be submitted to Phys. Rev.

    Estimation of drift and diffusion functions from time series data: A maximum likelihood framework

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    Complex systems are characterized by a huge number of degrees of freedom often interacting in a non-linear manner. In many cases macroscopic states, however, can be characterized by a small number of order parameters that obey stochastic dynamics in time. Recently techniques for the estimation of the corresponding stochastic differential equations from measured data have been introduced. This contribution develops a framework for the estimation of the functions and their respective (Bayesian posterior) confidence regions based on likelihood estimators. In succession approximations are introduced that significantly improve the efficiency of the estimation procedure. While being consistent with standard approaches to the problem this contribution solves important problems concerning the applicability and the accuracy of estimated parameters.Comment: 18 pages, 2 figure

    Effects of external global noise on the catalytic CO oxidation on Pt(110)

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    Oxidation reaction of CO on a single platinum crystal is a reaction-diffusion system that may exhibit bistable, excitable, and oscillatory behavior. We studied the effect of a stochastic signal artificially introduced into the system through the partial pressure of CO. First, the external signal is employed as a turbulence suppression tool, and second, it modifies the boundaries in the bistable transition between the CO and oxygen covered phases. Experiments using photoemission electron microscopy (PEEM) together with numerical simulations performed with the Krischer-Eiswirth-Ertl (KEE) model are presented.Comment: 15 pages, 7 figures, accepted in J. Chem. Phy

    Correlation of optical conductivity and ARPES spectra of strong-coupling large polarons and its display in cuprates

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    Common approach is used to calculate band due to strong-coupling large polaron (SCLP) photodissociation in ARPES and in optical conductivity (OC) spectra. It is based on using the coherent-states representation for the phonon field in SCLP. The calculated positions of both band maximums are universal functions of one parameter - the SCLP binding energy Ep: ARPES band maximum lies at binding energy about 3.2Ep; the OC band maximum is at the photon energy about 4.2Ep. The half-widths of the bands are mainly determined by Ep and slightly depend on Frohlich electron-phonon coupling constant: for its value 6-8 the ARPES band half-width is 1.7-1.3Ep and the OC band half-width is 2.8-2.2Ep. Using these results one can predict approximate position of ARPES band maximum and half-width from the maximum of mid-IR OC band and vice versa. Comparison of the results with experiments leads to a conclusion that underdoped cuprates contain SCLPs with Ep=0.1-0.2 eV that is in good conformity with the medium parameters in cuprates. The values of the polaron binding energy determined from experimental ARPES and OC spectra of the same material are in good conformity too: the difference between them is within 10 percent.Comment: 17 pages, 6 figure
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