1,136 research outputs found
Efficient single-photon-assisted entanglement concentration for partially entangled photon pairs
We present two realistic entanglement concentration protocols (ECPs) for pure
partially entangled photons. A partially entangled photon pair can be
concentrated to a maximally entangled pair with only an ancillary single photon
in a certain probability, while the conventional ones require two copies of
partially entangled pairs at least. Our first protocol is implemented with
linear optics and the second one is implemented with cross-Kerr nonlinearities.
Compared with other ECPs, they do not need to know the accurate coefficients of
the initial state. With linear optics, it is feasible with current experiment.
With cross-Kerr nonlinearities, it does not require the sophisticated
single-photon detectors and can be repeated to get a higher success
probability. Moreover, the second protocol can get the higher entanglement
transformation efficiency and it maybe the most economical one by far.
Meanwhile, both of protocols are more suitable for multi-photon system
concentration, because they need less operations and classical communications.
All these advantages make two protocols be useful in current long-distance
quantum communications
A Novel Model of Working Set Selection for SMO Decomposition Methods
In the process of training Support Vector Machines (SVMs) by decomposition
methods, working set selection is an important technique, and some exciting
schemes were employed into this field. To improve working set selection, we
propose a new model for working set selection in sequential minimal
optimization (SMO) decomposition methods. In this model, it selects B as
working set without reselection. Some properties are given by simple proof, and
experiments demonstrate that the proposed method is in general faster than
existing methods.Comment: 8 pages, 12 figures, it was submitted to IEEE International
conference of Tools on Artificial Intelligenc
Multipartite entanglement purification with quantum nondemolition detectors
We present a scheme for multipartite entanglement purification of quantum
systems in a Greenberger-Horne-Zeilinger state with quantum nondemolition
detectors (QNDs). This scheme does not require the controlled-not gates which
cannot be implemented perfectly with linear optical elements at present, but
QNDs based on cross-Kerr nonlinearities. It works with two steps, i.e., the
bit-flipping error correction and the phase-flipping error correction. These
two steps can be iterated perfectly with parity checks and simple single-photon
measurements. This scheme does not require the parties to possess sophisticated
single photon detectors. These features maybe make this scheme more efficient
and feasible than others in practical applications.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure
1-(4-tert-Butylbenzyl)-3-phenyl-1H-pyrazole-5-carboxylic acid
In the title compound, C21H22N2O2, the mean plane of the pyrazole ring makes dihedral angles of 18.80 (12) and 77.13 (5)°, respectively, with the mean planes of the phenyl and tert-butylbenzyl rings. The carboxylate group is inclined at 8.51 (14)° with respect to the pyrazole ring. The crystal structure displays intermolecular O—H⋯O hydrogen bonding, generating centrosymmetric dimers
2-[5-(1,3-Benzodioxol-5-yl)-3-ferrocenyl-4,5-dihydro-1H-pyrazol-1-yl]-4-phenyl-1,3-thiazole
In the title compound, [Fe(C5H5)(C24H18N3O2S)], the pyrazoline ring adopts a twist conformation. The thiazole ring forms dihedral angles of 83.7 (2) and 34.4 (2)° with the benzene ring of the benzodioxole ring and the fused phenyl ring, respectively. The molecular conformation is stabilized by an intramolecular C—H⋯π interaction. The crystal packing features intermolecular C—H⋯N, C—H⋯O hydrogen bonds and weak C—H⋯π interactions
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