4,793 research outputs found
The Counterpart Principle of Analogical Support by Structural Similarity
We propose and investigate an Analogy Principle in the context of Unary Inductive Logic based on a notion of support by structural similarity which is often employed to motivate scientific conjectures
Quantum estimation via minimum Kullback entropy principle
We address quantum estimation in situations where one has at disposal data
from the measurement of an incomplete set of observables and some a priori
information on the state itself. By expressing the a priori information in
terms of a bias toward a given state the problem may be faced by minimizing the
quantum relative entropy (Kullback entropy) with the constraint of reproducing
the data. We exploit the resulting minimum Kullback entropy principle for the
estimation of a quantum state from the measurement of a single observable,
either from the sole mean value or from the complete probability distribution,
and apply it as a tool for the estimation of weak Hamiltonian processes. Qubit
and harmonic oscillator systems are analyzed in some details.Comment: 7 pages, slightly revised version, no figure
Ramsey numbers and adiabatic quantum computing
The graph-theoretic Ramsey numbers are notoriously difficult to calculate. In
fact, for the two-color Ramsey numbers with , only nine are
currently known. We present a quantum algorithm for the computation of the
Ramsey numbers . We show how the computation of can be mapped
to a combinatorial optimization problem whose solution can be found using
adiabatic quantum evolution. We numerically simulate this adiabatic quantum
algorithm and show that it correctly determines the Ramsey numbers R(3,3) and
R(2,s) for . We then discuss the algorithm's experimental
implementation, and close by showing that Ramsey number computation belongs to
the quantum complexity class QMA.Comment: 4 pages, 1 table, no figures, published versio
Estimating precipitation on early Mars using a radiative-convective model of the atmosphere and comparison with inferred runoff from geomorphology
We compare estimates of atmospheric precipitation during the Martian
Noachian-Hesperian boundary 3.8 Gyr ago as calculated in a radiative-convective
column model of the atmosphere with runoff values estimated from a
geomorphological analysis of dendritic valley network discharge rates. In the
atmospheric model, we assume CO2-H2O-N2 atmospheres with surface pressures
varying from 20 mb to 3 bar with input solar luminosity reduced to 75% the
modern value.
Results from the valley network analysis are of the order of a few mm d-1
liquid water precipitation (1.5-10.6 mm d-1, with a median of 3.1 mm d-1).
Atmospheric model results are much lower, from about 0.001-1 mm d-1 of snowfall
(depending on CO2 partial pressure). Hence, the atmospheric model predicts a
significantly lower amount of precipitated water than estimated from the
geomorphological analysis. Furthermore, global mean surface temperatures are
below freezing, i.e. runoff is most likely not directly linked to
precipitation. Therefore, our results strongly favor a cold early Mars with
episodic snowmelt as a source for runoff.
Our approach is challenged by mostly unconstrained parameters, e.g.
greenhouse gas abundance, global meteorology (for example, clouds) and
planetary parameters such as obliquity- which affect the atmospheric result -
as as well as by inherent problems in estimating discharge and runoff on
ancient Mars, such as a lack of knowledge on infiltration and evaporation rates
and on flooding timescales, which affect the geomorphological data.
Nevertheless, our work represents a first step in combining and interpreting
quantitative tools applied in early Mars atmospheric and geomorphological
studies.Comment: accepted in Planetary and Space Science, 37 pages, 14 figures, 2
table
Phase estimation for thermal Gaussian states
We give the optimal bounds on the phase-estimation precision for mixed
Gaussian states in the single-copy and many-copy regimes. Specifically, we
focus on displaced thermal and squeezed thermal states. We find that while for
displaced thermal states an increase in temperature reduces the estimation
fidelity, for squeezed thermal states a larger temperature can enhance the
estimation fidelity. The many-copy optimal bounds are compared with the minimum
variance achieved by three important single-shot measurement strategies. We
show that the single-copy canonical phase measurement does not always attain
the optimal bounds in the many-copy scenario. Adaptive homodyning schemes do
attain the bounds for displaced thermal states, but for squeezed states they
yield fidelities that are insensitive to temperature variations and are,
therefore, sub-optimal. Finally, we find that heterodyne measurements perform
very poorly for pure states but can attain the optimal bounds for sufficiently
mixed states. We apply our results to investigate the influence of losses in an
optical metrology experiment. In the presence of losses squeezed states cease
to provide Heisenberg limited precision and their performance is close to that
of coherent states with the same mean photon number.Comment: typos correcte
Resolving the nature of electronic excitations in resonant inelastic x-ray scattering
The study of elementary bosonic excitations is essential toward a complete
description of quantum electronic solids. In this context, resonant inelastic
X-ray scattering (RIXS) has recently risen to becoming a versatile probe of
electronic excitations in strongly correlated electron systems. The nature of
the radiation-matter interaction endows RIXS with the ability to resolve the
charge, spin and orbital nature of individual excitations. However, this
capability has been only marginally explored to date. Here, we demonstrate a
systematic method for the extraction of the character of excitations as
imprinted in the azimuthal dependence of the RIXS signal. Using this novel
approach, we resolve the charge, spin, and orbital nature of elastic
scattering, (para-)magnon/bimagnon modes, and higher energy dd excitations in
magnetically-ordered and superconducting copper-oxide perovskites (Nd2CuO4 and
YBa2Cu3O6.75). Our method derives from a direct application of scattering
theory, enabling us to deconstruct the complex scattering tensor as a function
of energy loss. In particular, we use the characteristic tensorial nature of
each excitation to precisely and reliably disentangle the charge and spin
contributions to the low energy RIXS spectrum. This procedure enables to
separately track the evolution of spin and charge spectral distributions in
cuprates with doping. Our results demonstrate a new capability that can be
integrated into the RIXS toolset, and that promises to be widely applicable to
materials with intertwined spin, orbital, and charge excitations
Monotonic properties of the shift and penetration factors
We study derivatives of the shift and penetration factors of collision theory
with respect to energy, angular momentum, and charge. Definitive results for
the signs of these derivatives are found for the repulsive Coulomb case. In
particular, we find that the derivative of the shift factor with respect to
energy is positive for the repulsive Coulomb case, a long anticipated but
heretofore unproven result. These results are closely connected to the
properties of the sum of squares of the regular and irregular Coulomb
functions; we also present investigations of this quantity.Comment: 13 pages, 1 figur
Stokes phenomenon and matched asymptotic expansions
This paper describes the use of matched asymptotic expansions to illuminate the description of functions exhibiting Stokes phenomenon. In particular the approach highlights the way in which the local structure and the possibility of finding Stokes multipliers explicitly depend on the behaviour of the coefficients of the relevant asymptotic expansions
Scaling in many-body systems and proton structure function
The observation of scaling in processes in which a weakly interacting probe
delivers large momentum to a many-body system simply reflects the
dominance of incoherent scattering off target constituents. While a suitably
defined scaling function may provide rich information on the internal dynamics
of the target, in general its extraction from the measured cross section
requires careful consideration of the nature of the interaction driving the
scattering process. The analysis of deep inelastic electron-proton scattering
in the target rest frame within standard many-body theory naturally leads to
the emergence of a scaling function that, unlike the commonly used structure
functions and , can be directly identified with the intrinsic proton
response.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures. Proceedings of the 11th Conference on Recent
Progress in Many-Body Theories, Manchester, UK, July 9-13 200
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