42 research outputs found
Classical limit of the Casimir entropy for scalar massless field
We study the Casimir effect at finite temperature for a massless scalar field
in the parallel plates geometry in N spatial dimensions, under various
combinations of Dirichlet and Neumann boundary conditions on the plates. We
show that in all these cases the entropy, in the limit where energy
equipartitioning applies, is a geometrical factor whose sign determines the
sign of the Casimir force.Comment: 14 page
Model Reduction Near Periodic Orbits of Hybrid Dynamical Systems
We show that, near periodic orbits, a class of hybrid models can be reduced
to or approximated by smooth continuous-time dynamical systems. Specifically,
near an exponentially stable periodic orbit undergoing isolated transitions in
a hybrid dynamical system, nearby executions generically contract
superexponentially to a constant-dimensional subsystem. Under a non-degeneracy
condition on the rank deficiency of the associated Poincare map, the
contraction occurs in finite time regardless of the stability properties of the
orbit. Hybrid transitions may be removed from the resulting subsystem via a
topological quotient that admits a smooth structure to yield an equivalent
smooth dynamical system. We demonstrate reduction of a high-dimensional
underactuated mechanical model for terrestrial locomotion, assess structural
stability of deadbeat controllers for rhythmic locomotion and manipulation, and
derive a normal form for the stability basin of a hybrid oscillator. These
applications illustrate the utility of our theoretical results for synthesis
and analysis of feedback control laws for rhythmic hybrid behavior
Maximal Entanglement, Collective Coordinates and Tracking the King
Maximal entangled states (MES) provide a basis to two d-dimensional particles
Hilbert space, d=prime . The MES forming this basis are product states
in the collective, center of mass and relative, coordinates. These states are
associated (underpinned) with lines of finite geometry whose constituent points
are associated with product states carrying Mutual Unbiased Bases (MUB) labels.
This representation is shown to be convenient for the study of the Mean King
Problem and a variant thereof, termed Tracking the King which proves to be a
novel quantum communication channel. The main topics, notions used are reviewed
in an attempt to have the paper self contained.Comment: 8. arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:1206.3884,
arXiv:1206.035
Morphology and the gradient of a symmetric potential predicts gait transitions of dogs
Gaits and gait transitions play a central role in the movement of animals. Symmetry is thought to govern the structure of the nervous system, and constrain the limb motions of quadrupeds. We quantify the symmetry of dog gaits with respect to combinations of bilateral, fore-aft, and spatio-temporal symmetry groups. We tested the ability of symmetries to model motion capture data of dogs walking, trotting and transitioning between those gaits. Fully symmetric models performed comparably to asymmetric with only a 22% increase in the residual sum of squares and only one-quarter of the parameters. This required adding a spatio-temporal shift representing a lag between fore and hind limbs. Without this shift, the symmetric model residual sum of squares was 1700% larger. This shift is related to (linear regression, n = 5, p = 0.0328) dog morphology. That this symmetry is respected throughout the gaits and transitions indicates that it generalizes outside a single gait. We propose that relative phasing of limb motions can be described by an interaction potential with a symmetric structure. This approach can be extended to the study of interaction of neurodynamic and kinematic variables, providing a system-level model that couples neuronal central pattern generator networks and mechanical models
Dimension Reduction Near Periodic Orbits of Hybrid Systems
When the Poincar\'{e} map associated with a periodic orbit of a hybrid
dynamical system has constant-rank iterates, we demonstrate the existence of a
constant-dimensional invariant subsystem near the orbit which attracts all
nearby trajectories in finite time. This result shows that the long-term
behavior of a hybrid model with a large number of degrees-of-freedom may be
governed by a low-dimensional smooth dynamical system. The appearance of such
simplified models enables the translation of analytical tools from smooth
systems-such as Floquet theory-to the hybrid setting and provides a bridge
between the efforts of biologists and engineers studying legged locomotion.Comment: Full version of conference paper appearing in IEEE CDC/ECC 201
Entanglement discontinuity
We identify a class of two-mode squeezed states which are parametrized by an
angular variable and a squeezing parameter . We show
that, for a large squeezing value, these states are either (almost) maximally
entangled or product states depending on the value of . This peculiar
behavior of entanglement is unique for infinite dimensional Hilbert space and
has consequences for the entangling power of unitary operators in such systems.
Finally, we show that, at the limit these states demonstrate a
discontinuity attribute of entanglement.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Qubit metrology and decoherence
Quantum properties of the probes used to estimate a classical parameter can
be used to attain accuracies that beat the standard quantum limit. When qubits
are used to construct a quantum probe, it is known that initializing qubits
in an entangled "cat state," rather than in a separable state, can improve the
measurement uncertainty by a factor of . We investigate how the
measurement uncertainty is affected when the individual qubits in a probe are
subjected to decoherence. In the face of such decoherence, we regard the rate
at which qubits can be generated and the total duration of a
measurement as fixed resources, and we determine the optimal use of
entanglement among the qubits and the resulting optimal measurement uncertainty
as functions of and .Comment: 24 Pages, 3 Figure
Bell inequalities for random fields
The assumptions required for the derivation of Bell inequalities are not
usually satisfied for random fields in which there are any thermal or quantum
fluctuations, in contrast to the general satisfaction of the assumptions for
classical two point particle models. Classical random field models that
explicitly include the effects of quantum fluctuations on measurement are
possible for experiments that violate Bell inequalities.Comment: 18 pages; 1 figure; v4: Essentially the published version; extensive
improvements. v3: Better description of the relationship between classical
random fields and quantum fields; better description of random field models.
More extensive references. v2: Abstract and introduction clarifie
Generalized coherent states are unique Bell states of quantum systems with Lie group symmetries
We consider quantum systems, whose dynamical symmetry groups are semisimple
Lie groups, which can be split or decay into two subsystems of the same
symmetry. We prove that the only states of such a system that factorize upon
splitting are the generalized coherent states. Since Bell's inequality is never
violated by the direct product state, when the system prepared in the
generalized coherent state is split, no quantum correlations are created.
Therefore, the generalized coherent states are the unique Bell states, i.e.,
the pure quantum states preserving the fundamental classical property of
satisfying Bell's inequality upon splitting.Comment: 4 pages, REVTeX, amssymb style. More information on
http://www.technion.ac.il/~brif/science.htm