2,267 research outputs found

    A particulate basis for a lattice-gas model of amphiphilic fluids

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    We show that the flux-field expansion derived by Boghosian and Coveney for the Rothman-Keller immiscible fluid model can be derived in a simpler and more general way in terms of the completely symmetric tensor kernels introduced by those authors. Using this generalised flux-field expansion we show that the more complex amphiphilic model of Boghosian Coveney and Emerton can also be derived from an underlying model of particle interactions. The consequences of this derivation are discussed in the context of previous equilibrium Ising-like lattice models and other non-equilibrium mesoscale models.Comment: To appear in Phil. Trans. Roy. Soc. (Proceedings of the Xth International Conference on Discrete Simulation of Fluid Dynamics.

    Stationary Phase Method in Discrete Wigner Functions and Classical Simulation of Quantum Circuits

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    One of the lowest-order corrections to Gaussian quantum mechanics in infinite-dimensional Hilbert spaces are Airy functions: a uniformization of the stationary phase method applied in the path integral perspective. We introduce a ``periodized stationary phase method'' to discrete Wigner functions of systems with odd prime dimension and show that the Ο€8\frac{\pi}{8} gate is the discrete analog of the Airy function. We then establish a relationship between the stabilizer rank of states and the number of quadratic Gauss sums necessary in the periodized stationary phase method. This allows us to develop a classical strong simulation of a single qutrit marginal on tt qutrit Ο€8\frac{\pi}{8} gates that are followed by Clifford evolution, and show that this only requires 3t2+13^{\frac{t}{2}+1} quadratic Gauss sums. This outperforms the best alternative qutrit algorithm (based on Wigner negativity and scaling as ∼30.8t\sim\hspace{-3pt} 3^{0.8 t} for 10βˆ’210^{-2} precision) for any number of Ο€8\frac{\pi}{8} gates to full precision

    A three-dimensional lattice gas model for amphiphilic fluid dynamics

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    We describe a three-dimensional hydrodynamic lattice-gas model of amphiphilic fluids. This model of the non-equilibrium properties of oil-water-surfactant systems, which is a non-trivial extension of an earlier two-dimensional realisation due to Boghosian, Coveney and Emerton [Boghosian, Coveney, and Emerton 1996, Proc. Roy. Soc. A 452, 1221-1250], can be studied effectively only when it is implemented using high-performance computing and visualisation techniques. We describe essential aspects of the model's theoretical basis and computer implementation, and report on the phenomenological properties of the model which confirm that it correctly captures binary oil-water and surfactant-water behaviour, as well as the complex phase behaviour of ternary amphiphilic fluids.Comment: 34 pages, 13 figures, high resolution figures available on reques

    Public private Partnerships: What does the future hold?

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