The Quantum Hall Effect
... particles that roam around these systems carry a fraction of the charge of the electron, as if the electron has split itself into several pieces. Yet this occurs despite the fact that the electron is (and remains!) an indivisible constituent of matter. In fact, it is not just the charge of the elect ...
... particles that roam around these systems carry a fraction of the charge of the electron, as if the electron has split itself into several pieces. Yet this occurs despite the fact that the electron is (and remains!) an indivisible constituent of matter. In fact, it is not just the charge of the elect ...
Cumulants and partition lattices.
... are given distinct labels may be equal, say X 2 = X 3 with probability one, so this is not a limitation. As virtually everyone who has worked with cumulants, from Kaplan (1952) to Speed and thereafter, has noted, the general results are most transparent when all random variables are taken as distinc ...
... are given distinct labels may be equal, say X 2 = X 3 with probability one, so this is not a limitation. As virtually everyone who has worked with cumulants, from Kaplan (1952) to Speed and thereafter, has noted, the general results are most transparent when all random variables are taken as distinc ...
mjcrescimanno.people.ysu.edu
... QHO in from a more abstract, algebraic (and more useful!) point of view. This is not just repackaging; it will be key to undertstanding more aspects of the classical limit and is also the basis of the idea of what a particle is in quantum field theory. ...
... QHO in from a more abstract, algebraic (and more useful!) point of view. This is not just repackaging; it will be key to undertstanding more aspects of the classical limit and is also the basis of the idea of what a particle is in quantum field theory. ...
THE PROBLEM OF PHOTON GAS: HOW TO SOLVE IT
... the truth of physical theories. In my opinion, lack of the criterion of the truth of theories in theoretical physics is explained by the fact that the system of physical (i.e. special scientific) concepts and laws is incomplete: it does not include many universal (i.e. the general scientific) concep ...
... the truth of physical theories. In my opinion, lack of the criterion of the truth of theories in theoretical physics is explained by the fact that the system of physical (i.e. special scientific) concepts and laws is incomplete: it does not include many universal (i.e. the general scientific) concep ...
Space-time description of squeezing
... conjugate operators X and X2 built linearly from the field operators D and B. ...
... conjugate operators X and X2 built linearly from the field operators D and B. ...
Quantum Measurements with Dynamically Bistable Systems
... dual role. It imposes a limitation on sensitivity in the familiar regime of a bifurcation amplifier. On the other hand, it makes it possible to use a bistable modulated oscillator in a new regime of a balanced dynamical bridge. We discuss the switching probabilities and show that they display scalin ...
... dual role. It imposes a limitation on sensitivity in the familiar regime of a bifurcation amplifier. On the other hand, it makes it possible to use a bistable modulated oscillator in a new regime of a balanced dynamical bridge. We discuss the switching probabilities and show that they display scalin ...
Optically dressed magnetic atoms
... With a single Mn atom introduced in the dot, the energy and polarization of the photon emitted or absorbed by the dot depends on the spin state of the S=5/2 magnetic atom. This is due to the exchange interaction present in the excited state, between the confined electron-hole pair and the Mn spin. T ...
... With a single Mn atom introduced in the dot, the energy and polarization of the photon emitted or absorbed by the dot depends on the spin state of the S=5/2 magnetic atom. This is due to the exchange interaction present in the excited state, between the confined electron-hole pair and the Mn spin. T ...
Quantum Field Theory, its Concepts Viewed from a Semiotic
... entering the strong interaction part of the Lagrangian, correspond to asymptotic particles — even in the restricted sense qualified before. Instead, the asymptotic particles subject to the strong interaction are supposed to be related to particular ‘products’ of these fields. This theoretical pictur ...
... entering the strong interaction part of the Lagrangian, correspond to asymptotic particles — even in the restricted sense qualified before. Instead, the asymptotic particles subject to the strong interaction are supposed to be related to particular ‘products’ of these fields. This theoretical pictur ...
From optimal state estimation to efficient quantum algorithms
... (e.g., coset states for HSP) • Express the states in terms of an average-case algebraic problem (e.g., subset sum for dihedral HSP) • Perform the pretty good measurement on k copies of the states: - Choose k large enough that the measurement succeeds with reasonably high probability (this happens if ...
... (e.g., coset states for HSP) • Express the states in terms of an average-case algebraic problem (e.g., subset sum for dihedral HSP) • Perform the pretty good measurement on k copies of the states: - Choose k large enough that the measurement succeeds with reasonably high probability (this happens if ...
Slide 1
... • It turns out to be rather a lucky guess that isospin is a symmetry of the strong interaction: both mt and T are conserved in strong scattering and decay processes. • The electromagnetic interaction breaks isospin symmetry; i.e. it can distinguish between different values of mt There is a simple ...
... • It turns out to be rather a lucky guess that isospin is a symmetry of the strong interaction: both mt and T are conserved in strong scattering and decay processes. • The electromagnetic interaction breaks isospin symmetry; i.e. it can distinguish between different values of mt There is a simple ...
High-pressure Affected Exciton Dynamics of CdSe/ZnS Core
... semiconductor quantum dots (QDs) shows great difference with bulk materials. The generated exciton, electron-hole structure, can be seemed as the the hydrogen-like model which makes the mechanism discussion much simple. Therefore, semiconductor QDs are good objects for fundamental research in variou ...
... semiconductor quantum dots (QDs) shows great difference with bulk materials. The generated exciton, electron-hole structure, can be seemed as the the hydrogen-like model which makes the mechanism discussion much simple. Therefore, semiconductor QDs are good objects for fundamental research in variou ...
functions and (so-called px- and py-orbitals) are linear combinations
... spherical wave functions (atomic orbitals), consisted in making linear combinations of them (further mixing for short), which lay in the base of the construction of QM atomic model. The legality of linear combinations of wave functions is stated by one of the fundamental principles of QM – the super ...
... spherical wave functions (atomic orbitals), consisted in making linear combinations of them (further mixing for short), which lay in the base of the construction of QM atomic model. The legality of linear combinations of wave functions is stated by one of the fundamental principles of QM – the super ...
Computing Systems
... • Understanding the universe itself from the point of view of information processing. The Zuse-Fredkin thesis, dating back to the 1960s, states that the entire universe is a huge cellular automaton which continuously updates its rules. Recently it has been suggested that the whole universe is a quan ...
... • Understanding the universe itself from the point of view of information processing. The Zuse-Fredkin thesis, dating back to the 1960s, states that the entire universe is a huge cellular automaton which continuously updates its rules. Recently it has been suggested that the whole universe is a quan ...
Solving Schrödinger`s Wave Equation
... mechanical tunnelling. By the same types of random collision processes which we discussed in connection with the Boltzmann and Maxwell distributions, α-particles can acquire a significant amount of kinetic energy and so can have positive energy, as illustrated by the line Y. We can develop a simple ...
... mechanical tunnelling. By the same types of random collision processes which we discussed in connection with the Boltzmann and Maxwell distributions, α-particles can acquire a significant amount of kinetic energy and so can have positive energy, as illustrated by the line Y. We can develop a simple ...