24 research outputs found

    Ancillas in Quantum Computation: Beyond Two-Level Systems

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    Quantum computers have the potential to solve problems that are believed to be classically intractable. However, building such a device is proving to be very challenging. In this thesis, two physically promising settings for quantum computation are investigated: the one-way quantum computer and ancilla-based quantum gates. The majority of both the theoretical and experimental focus in the field of quantum computation has been on computation using 2-level quantum systems, known as qubits. In contrast to this, in this thesis I consider the relatively less well-understood setting of quantum computation using continuous variables or d-level quantum systems, called qudits. I develop a simple notation that encompasses each different encoding, and is applicable to a `general quantum variable'. These ideas are then used to investigate computational depth (a proxy for time) in quantum circuits and one-way quantum computations in this general quantum variable setting. In doing so, the parallelism inherent in the one-way quantum computer is made precise. In the second half of this thesis, a range of techniques are proposed for implementing entangling gates on a well-isolated computational register via interactions with `ancillary' systems. In particular, ancilla-based quantum gates for general quantum variables are investigated - including the interesting case of hybrid quantum computation, whereby more than one encoding is used in tandem. The methods proposed herein each have their own unique advantages, such as: reducing gate-counts in certain circuits, allowing for inherently parallel computation, or minimising the physical requirements for universal quantum computation. In particular, the final gate techniques that are proposed in this thesis may implement any quantum computation using only a single fixed ancilla-register interaction gate and ancillas prepared in simple states. This then allows the computational register to consist of well-isolated `memory' quantum variables and the ancillas need only be optimised for a single high-quality fixed interaction gate. Hence, this provides a simple and highly promising setting for physically implementing a quantum computer

    The physical and mental health of a large military cohort: baseline functional health status of the Millennium Cohort

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background:</p> <p>The US military is currently involved in large, lengthy, and complex combat operations around the world. Effective military operations require optimal health of deployed service members, and both mental and physical health can be affected by military operations.</p> <p>Methods:</p> <p>Baseline data were collected from 77,047 US service members during 2001–2003 as part of a large, longitudinal, population-based military health study (the Millennium Cohort Study). The authors calculated unadjusted, adjusted, and weighted means for the Medical Outcomes Study Short Form 36-item Survey for Veterans physical (PCS) and mental component summary (MCS) scores over a variety of demographic and military characteristics at baseline.</p> <p>Results:</p> <p>The unadjusted mean PCS and MCS scores for this study were 53.4 (95% confidence interval: 53.3–53.4) and 52.8 (95% confidence interval: 52.7–52.9). Average PCS and MCS scores were slightly more favorable in this military sample compared to those of the US general population of the same age and sex. Factors independently associated with more favorable health status included male gender, being married, higher educational attainment, higher military rank, and Air Force service. Combat specialists had similar health status compared to other military occupations. Having been deployed to Southwest Asia, Bosnia, or Kosovo between 1998 and 2000 was not associated with diminished health status.</p> <p>Conclusion:</p> <p>The baseline health status of this large population-based military cohort is better than that of the US general population of the same age and sex distribution over the same time period, especially in older age groups. Deployment experiences during the period of 1998–2001 were not associated with decreased health status. These data will serve as a useful reference for other military health studies and for future longitudinal analyses.</p

    Improved Low-Noise Cryogenic Transimpedance Amplifier

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    We discuss the design, construction, and testing of a cryogenic transimpedance amplifier. This amplifier is a simplified and improved version of our earlier designs. Improvements include lower noise achieved by better shielding, greater bandwidth by reducing stray capacitance in the printed wiring board layout, and reduced heat load to our detector cryostat by remote mounting of the amplifier assembly to a secondary cold stage. A description of the electrical and physical design is given and noise and bandwidth measurements are presented. Room temperature and cryogenic data for the amplifier alone and for a complete assembly including a detector are provided. The selection of certain critical components is discussed. This cryogenic amplifier has been tested using Si:As blocked impurity band (BIB) infrared detectors operating at temperatures between 5 K and 12 K

    Reading Science: SF and the Uses of Literature

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    Science has opened up new hopes and fears for the future, and science fiction (SF) articulates those hopes and fears by imagining the social and human consequences of scientific developments. SF also acts back on science by critically responding to its confident pronouncements. ‘Unsettling Scientific Stories: Expertise, Narrative, and Future Histories’ is an AHRC- funded project exploring how people have thought about and envisioned their futures at different points over the course of the long technological twentieth-century. Our project frames science/fiction as a partner in the imagination and exploration of alternative futures, and explores new ways of using fiction as a relevant mode of socio-historical analysis. As part of our fieldwork, under the title ‘Prospecting Futures’, we will be working with texts, readers and reading groups to explore how contemporary science futures are being created, interpreted and navigated by SF writers and their audiences. In particular we are interested in collaborating with active SF readers as lay experts in envisioning and exploring social-scientific alternatives and in exploring how fictional narratives shape their engagement with collective futures. In anticipation of focus groups with readers to be held across 2017, we will work through some of the theoretical and epistemological resources that can help us understand SF readers as lay futurologists and asks how thinking about practices of reading and writing fiction might contribute a much-needed speculative strand to contemporary sociological analysis

    No difference in the skeletal muscle angiogenic response to aerobic exercise training between young and aged men

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    Ischaemia-induced skeletal muscle angiogenesis is impaired in aged compared with young mice. In humans, vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) mRNA and protein following an acute exercise bout are lower in aged compared with young untrained men. We hypothesized that exercise-induced skeletal muscle angiogenesis would be attenuated in aged compared with young men. In eight aged (mean age: 64 years) and six young (mean age: 25 years) sedentary men, muscle biopsies were obtained from the vastus lateralis prior to (Pre), after 1 week and after 8 weeks of an aerobic exercise training program for the measurement of capillarization and VEGF mRNA. Dialysate VEGF protein collected from the muscle interstitial space was measured at rest and during submaximal exercise at Pre, 1 week and 8 weeks. Exercise training increased capillary contacts (CC) and capillary-to-fibre perimeter exchange index (CFPE) of type I and IIA fibres similarly in young and aged. The CC of type IIA and IIB fibres was lower in aged compared with young independent of training status. Exercise-induced interstitial VEGF protein was lower in aged compared with young independent of training status. In untrained, greater exercise-induced interstitial VEGF protein during exercise was associated with greater type I, IIA and IIB CC. Exercise training increased VEGF mRNA similarly in young and aged. These results demonstrate that the angiogenic response to aerobic exercise training is not altered during the ageing process in humans. In addition, muscular activity-associated increases in interstitial VEGF protein may play an important role in the maintenance of skeletal muscle capillarization across the life span
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