6,762 research outputs found
Unbounded-error One-way Classical and Quantum Communication Complexity
This paper studies the gap between quantum one-way communication complexity
and its classical counterpart , under the {\em unbounded-error}
setting, i.e., it is enough that the success probability is strictly greater
than 1/2. It is proved that for {\em any} (total or partial) Boolean function
, , i.e., the former is always exactly one half
as large as the latter. The result has an application to obtaining (again an
exact) bound for the existence of -QRAC which is the -qubit random
access coding that can recover any one of original bits with success
probability . We can prove that -QRAC exists if and only if
. Previously, only the construction of QRAC using one qubit,
the existence of -RAC, and the non-existence of
-QRAC were known.Comment: 9 pages. To appear in Proc. ICALP 200
The WiggleZ Dark Energy Survey: Galaxy Evolution at 0.25 ≤ z ≤ 0.75 Using the Second Red-Sequence Cluster Survey
We study the evolution of galaxy populations around the spectroscopic WiggleZ sample of star-forming galaxies at 0.25 ≤ z ≤ 0.75 using the photometric catalog from the Second Red-Sequence Cluster Survey (RCS2). We probe the optical photometric properties of the net excess neighbor galaxies. The key concept is that the marker galaxies and their neighbors are located at the same redshift, providing a sample of galaxies representing a complete census of galaxies in the neighborhood of star-forming galaxies. The results are compared with those using the RCS WiggleZ Spare-Fibre (RCS-WSF) sample as markers, representing galaxies in cluster environments at 0.25 ≤ z ≤ 0.45. By analyzing the stacked color-color properties of the WiggleZ neighbor galaxies, we find that their optical colors are not a strong function of indicators of star-forming activities such as EW([O II]) or Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX) near-UV luminosity of the markers. The galaxies around the WiggleZ markers exhibit a bimodal distribution on the color-magnitude diagram, with most of them located in the blue cloud. The optical galaxy luminosity functions (GLFs) of the blue neighbor galaxies have a faint-end slope α of ~ –1.3, similar to that for galaxies in cluster environments drawn from the RCS-WSF sample. The faint-end slope of the GLF for the red neighbors, however, is ~ –0.4, significantly shallower than the ~ –0.7 found for those in cluster environments. This suggests that the buildup of the faint end of the red sequence in cluster environments is in a significantly more advanced stage than that in the star-forming and lower galaxy density WiggleZ neighborhoods. We find that the red galaxy fraction (f_red) around the star-forming WiggleZ galaxies has similar values from z ~ 0.3 to z ~ 0.6 with f_red ~ 0.28, but drops to f_red ~ 0.20 at z gsim 0.7. This change of f_red with redshift suggests that there is either a higher rate of star-forming galaxies entering the luminosity-limited sample at z ≳ 0.7, or a decrease in the quenching rate of star formation at that redshift. Comparing to that in a dense cluster environment, the f_red of the WiggleZ neighbors is both considerably smaller and has a more moderate change with redshift, pointing to the stronger and more prevalent environmental influences on galaxy evolution in high-density regions
Magnetothermal Transport in Spin-Ladder Systems
We study a theoretical model for the magnetothermal conductivity of a
spin-1/2 ladder with low exchange coupling () subject to a strong
magnetic field . Our theory for the thermal transport accounts for the
contribution of spinons coupled to lattice phonon modes in the one-dimensional
lattice. We employ a mapping of the ladder Hamiltonian onto an XXZ spin-chain
in a weaker effective field B_{eff}=B-B_{0}B_{0}=(B_{c1}+B_{c2})/2B{\rm
Br_4(C_5H_{12}N)_2}$ (BPCB).Comment: 14 pages, 4 figure
Paramagnonlike excitations and spin diffusion in magnetic resonance studies of copper oxide superconductors
The relaxation function theory for a doped two-dimensional Heisenberg
antiferromagnetic system in the paramagnetic state for all wave vectors through
the Brillouin zone is presented in view of low frequency response of high-
copper oxide superconductors. We deduced the regions of long lifetime [ K] and "overdamped" [ K]
paramagnonlike excitations in the temperature ()-doping index () phase
diagram from plane oxygen nuclear spin-lattice relaxation rate
data in up to optimally doped LaSrCuO thus providing the
regimes for the spin wave concept and the ''overdamped'' mode.Comment: Physical Review B, accepted, in pres
Conserved Density Fluctuation and Temporal Correlation Function in HTL Perturbation Theory
Considering recently developed Hard Thermal Loop perturbation theory that
takes into account the effect of the variation of the external field through
the fluctuations of a conserved quantity we calculate the temporal component of
the Euclidian correlation function in the vector channel. The results are found
to be in good agreement with the very recent results obtained within the
quenched approximation of QCD and small values of the quark mass ()
on improved lattices of size at (),
(), and (), where is
the temporal extent of the lattice. This suggests that the results from lattice
QCD and Hard Thermal Loop perturbation theory are in close proximity for a
quantity associated with the conserved density fluctuation.Comment: 16 pages, 4 figures; One para added in introduction, Fig 1 modified;
Accepted in Phys. Rev.
Fractional Operators, Dirichlet Averages, and Splines
Fractional differential and integral operators, Dirichlet averages, and
splines of complex order are three seemingly distinct mathematical subject
areas addressing different questions and employing different methodologies. It
is the purpose of this paper to show that there are deep and interesting
relationships between these three areas. First a brief introduction to
fractional differential and integral operators defined on Lizorkin spaces is
presented and some of their main properties exhibited. This particular approach
has the advantage that several definitions of fractional derivatives and
integrals coincide. We then introduce Dirichlet averages and extend their
definition to an infinite-dimensional setting that is needed to exhibit the
relationships to splines of complex order. Finally, we focus on splines of
complex order and, in particular, on cardinal B-splines of complex order. The
fundamental connections to fractional derivatives and integrals as well as
Dirichlet averages are presented
Large thermomagnetic effects in weakly disordered Heisenberg chains
The interplay of different scattering mechanisms can lead to novel effects in
transport. We show theoretically that the interplay of weak impurity and
Umklapp scattering in spin-1/2 chains leads to a pronounced dip in the magnetic
field dependence of the thermal conductivity at a magnetic field . In sufficiently clean samples, the reduction of the magnetic
contribution to heat transport can easily become larger than 50% and the effect
is predicted to exist even in samples with a large exchange coupling, J >> B,
where the field-induced magnetization is small. Qualitatively, our theory might
explain dips at observed in recent heat transport measurements on
copper pyrazine dinitrate, but a fully quantitative description is not possible
within our model.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
The size-star formation relation of massive galaxies at 1.5<z<2.5
We study the relation between size and star formation activity in a complete
sample of 225 massive (M > 5 x 10^10 Msun) galaxies at 1.5<z<2.5, selected from
the FIREWORKS UV-IR catalog of the CDFS. Based on stellar population synthesis
model fits to the observed restframe UV-NIR SEDs, and independent MIPS 24
micron observations, 65% of galaxies are actively forming stars, while 35% are
quiescent. Using sizes derived from 2D surface brightness profile fits to high
resolution (FWHM_{PSF}~0.45 arcsec) groundbased ISAAC data, we confirm and
improve the significance of the relation between star formation activity and
compactness found in previous studies, using a large, complete mass-limited
sample. At z~2, massive quiescent galaxies are significantly smaller than
massive star forming galaxies, and a median factor of 0.34+/-0.02 smaller than
galaxies of similar mass in the local universe. 13% of the quiescent galaxies
are unresolved in the ISAAC data, corresponding to sizes <1 kpc, more than 5
times smaller than galaxies of similar mass locally. The quiescent galaxies
span a Kormendy relation which, compared to the relation for local early types,
is shifted to smaller sizes and brighter surface brightnesses and is
incompatible with passive evolution. The progenitors of the quiescent galaxies,
were likely dominated by highly concentrated, intense nuclear star bursts at
z~3-4, in contrast to star forming galaxies at z~2 which are extended and
dominated by distributed star formation.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Regulation of phosphate transport in proximal tubules
Homeostasis of inorganic phosphate (Pi) is primarily an affair of the kidneys. Reabsorption of the bulk of filtered Pi occurs along the renal proximal tubule and is initiated by apically localized Na+-dependent Pi cotransporters. Tubular Pi reabsorption and therefore renal excretion of Pi is controlled by a number of hormones, including phosphatonins, and metabolic factors. In most cases, regulation of Pi reabsorption is achieved by changing the apical abundance of Na+/Pi cotransporters. The regulatory mechanisms involve various signaling pathways and a number of proteins that interact with Na+/Pi cotransporter
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