2,366 research outputs found
Reply to Marinatto's comment on "Bell's theorem without inequalities and without probabilities for two observers"
It is shown that Marinatto's claim [Phys. Rev. Lett. 90, 258901 (2003)] that
the proof of "Bell's theorem without inequalities and without probabilities for
two observers" [A. Cabello, Phys. Rev. Lett. 86, 1911 (2001)] requires four
spacelike separated observers rather than two is unjustified.Comment: REVTeX4, 1 pag
Stronger two-observer all-versus-nothing violation of local realism
We introduce a two-observer all-versus-nothing proof of Bell's theorem which
reduces the number of required quantum predictions from 9 [A. Cabello, Phys.
Rev. Lett. 87, 010403 (2001); Z.-B. Chen et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 90, 160408
(2003)] to 4, provides a greater amount of evidence against local realism,
reduces the detection efficiency requirements for a conclusive experimental
test of Bell's theorem, and leads to a Bell's inequality which resembles
Mermin's inequality for three observers [N. D. Mermin, Phys. Rev. Lett. 65,
1838 (1990)] but requires only two observers.Comment: REVTeX4, 5 page
Six-qubit permutation-based decoherence-free orthogonal basis
There is a natural orthogonal basis of the 6-qubit decoherence-free (DF)
space robust against collective noise. Interestingly, most of the basis states
can be obtained from one another just permuting qubits. This property: (a) is
useful for encoding qubits in DF subspaces, (b) allows the implementation of
the Bennett-Brassard 1984 (BB84) protocol in DF subspaces just permuting
qubits, which completes a the method for quantum key distribution using DF
states proposed by Boileau et al. [Phys. Rev. Lett. 92, 017901 (2004)], and (c)
points out that there is only one 6-qubit DF state which is essentially new
(not obtained by permutations) and therefore constitutes an interesting
experimental challenge.Comment: REVTeX4, 5 page
Twin inequality for fully contextual quantum correlations
Quantum mechanics exhibits a very peculiar form of contextuality. Identifying
and connecting the simplest scenarios in which more general theories can or
cannot be more contextual than quantum mechanics is a fundamental step in the
quest for the principle that singles out quantum contextuality. The former
scenario corresponds to the Klyachko-Can-Binicioglu-Shumovsky (KCBS)
inequality. Here we show that there is a simple tight inequality, twin to the
KCBS, for which quantum contextuality cannot be outperformed. In a sense, this
twin inequality is the simplest tool for recognizing fully contextual quantum
correlations.Comment: REVTeX4, 4 pages, 1 figur
Experimental observation of impossible-to-beat quantum advantage on a hybrid photonic system
Quantum resources outperform classical ones for certain communication and
computational tasks. Remarkably, in some cases, the quantum advantage cannot be
improved using hypothetical postquantum resources. A class of tasks with this
property can be singled out using graph theory. Here we report the experimental
observation of an impossible-to-beat quantum advantage on a four-dimensional
quantum system defined by the polarization and orbital angular momentum of a
single photon. The results show pristine evidence of the quantum advantage and
are compatible with the maximum advantage allowed using postquantum resources.Comment: REVTeX4, 5 pages, 2 figure
Orbital stability of the black soliton for the quintic Gross-Pitaevskii equation
In this work, a rigorous proof of the orbital stability of the black soliton
solution of the quintic Gross-Pitaevskii equation in one spatial dimension is
obtained. We first build and show explicitly black and dark soliton solutions
and we prove that the corresponding Ginzburg-Landau energy is coercive around
them by using some orthogonality conditions related to perturbations of the
black and dark solitons. The existence of suitable perturbations around black
and dark solitons satisfying the required orthogonality conditions is deduced
from an Implicit Function Theorem. In fact, these perturbations involve dark
solitons with sufficiently small speeds and some proportionality factors
arising from the explicit expression of their spatial derivative. We are also
able to control the evolution of the modulation parameters along the quintic
Gross-Pitaevskii flow by estimating their growth in time. Finally by using a
low order conservation law (momentum), we prove that the speed of the
perturbation is bounded and use that control to finish the proof of the orbital
stability of black solitons. As a direct consequence, we also prove the orbital
stability of the dark soliton in a small speed interval.Comment: 46 pages, 3 figures. Introduction extende
Two-player quantum pseudo-telepathy based on recent all-versus-nothing violations of local realism
We introduce two two-player quantum pseudo-telepathy games based on two
recently proposed all-versus-nothing (AVN) proofs of Bell's theorem [A.
Cabello, Phys. Rev. Lett. 95, 210401 (2005); Phys. Rev. A 72, 050101(R)
(2005)]. These games prove that Broadbent and Methot's claim that these AVN
proofs do not rule out local-hidden-variable theories in which it is possible
to exchange unlimited information inside the same light-cone (quant-ph/0511047)
is incorrect.Comment: REVTeX4, 5 page
The Forward and Backward Shift on the Hardy Space of a Tree
In this paper we initiate the study of the forward and backward shifts on the
Hardy space of a tree and the little Hardy space of a tree. In particular, we
investigate when these shifts are bounded, find the norm of the shifts if they
are bounded, characterize the trees in which they are an isometry, compute the
spectrum in some concrete examples, and completely determine when they are
hypercyclic.Comment: 23 page
Compact set of invariants characterizing graph states of up to eight qubits
The set of entanglement measures proposed by Hein, Eisert, and Briegel for
n-qubit graph states [Phys. Rev. A 69, 062311 (2004)] fails to distinguish
between inequivalent classes under local Clifford operations if n > 6. On the
other hand, the set of invariants proposed by van den Nest, Dehaene, and De
Moor (VDD) [Phys. Rev. A 72, 014307 (2005)] distinguishes between inequivalent
classes, but contains too many invariants (more than 2 10^{36} for n=7) to be
practical. Here we solve the problem of deciding which entanglement class a
graph state of n < 9 qubits belongs to by calculating some of the state's
intrinsic properties. We show that four invariants related to those proposed by
VDD are enough for distinguishing between all inequivalent classes with n < 9
qubits.Comment: REVTeX4, 9 pages, 1 figur
Modular analysis of the control of flagellar Ca2+-spike trains produced by CatSper and CaV channels in sea urchin sperm
Intracellular calcium ([Ca2+]i) is a basic and ubiquitous cellular signal controlling a wide variety of biological processes. A remarkable example is the steering of sea urchin spermatozoa towards the conspecific egg by a spatially and temporally orchestrated series of [Ca2+]i spikes. Although this process has been an experimental paradigm for reproduction and sperm chemotaxis studies, the composition and regulation of the signalling network underlying the cytosolic calcium fluctuations are hitherto not fully understood. Here, we used a differential equations model of the signalling network to assess which set of channels can explain the characteristic envelope and temporal organisation of the [Ca2+]i-spike trains. The signalling network comprises an initial membrane hyperpolarisation produced by an Upstream module triggered by the egg-released chemoattractant peptide, via receptor activation, cGMP synthesis and decay. Followed by downstream modules leading to intraflagellar pH (pHi), voltage and [Ca2+]i fluctuations. The Upstream module outputs were fitted to kinetic data on cGMP activity and early membrane potential changes measured in bulk cell populations. Two candidate modules featuring voltage-dependent Ca2+-channels link these outputs to the downstream dynamics and can independently explain the typical decaying envelope and the progressive spacing of the spikes. In the first module, [Ca2+]i-spike trains require the concerted action of a classical CaV-like channel and a potassium channel, BK (Slo1), whereas the second module relies on pHi-dependent CatSper dynamics articulated with voltage-dependent neutral sodium-proton exchanger (NHE). We analysed the dynamics of these two modules alone and in mixed scenarios. We show that the [Ca2+]i dynamics observed experimentally after sustained alkalinisation can be reproduced by a model featuring the CatSper and NHE module but not by those including the pH-independent CaV and BK module or proportionate mixed scenarios. We conclude in favour of the module containing CatSper and NHE and highlight experimentally testable predictions that would corroborate this conclusion
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