
An efficient algorithm for computing the Baker–Campbell–Hausdorff
... Explicit formulas 共1.3兲 and 共1.7兲, as well as recursion 共1.8兲 can be used in principle to construct the BCH series up to arbitrary degree in terms of commutators. As a matter of fact, several systematic computations of the series have been carried out along the years, starting with the work of Richt ...
... Explicit formulas 共1.3兲 and 共1.7兲, as well as recursion 共1.8兲 can be used in principle to construct the BCH series up to arbitrary degree in terms of commutators. As a matter of fact, several systematic computations of the series have been carried out along the years, starting with the work of Richt ...
Entanglement Entropy at Infinite-Randomness Fixed Points in Higher Dimensions Yu-Cheng Lin,
... IRFP [21]. The ground state of the system is given by a set of ordered clusters in the same geometry as in the classical percolation model —only nearest neighboring sites are combined into a cluster. In this cluster structure, the block entropy, determined by the number of the clusters connecting th ...
... IRFP [21]. The ground state of the system is given by a set of ordered clusters in the same geometry as in the classical percolation model —only nearest neighboring sites are combined into a cluster. In this cluster structure, the block entropy, determined by the number of the clusters connecting th ...
Mechanics II - Thierry Karsenti
... but rather the absence of clear and correct ideas about the relations between the concepts of physics. Learners often cannot say what forms the basis of a definition, what is the result of an experiment, and what should be treated as a theoretical generalizsation of experimental knowledge. It is imp ...
... but rather the absence of clear and correct ideas about the relations between the concepts of physics. Learners often cannot say what forms the basis of a definition, what is the result of an experiment, and what should be treated as a theoretical generalizsation of experimental knowledge. It is imp ...
PDF - Science Advances
... no level repulsion between the valence and the conduction bands belonging to the different irreps. One hundred thirty-eight inversion-asymmetric space groups We can similarly calculate band structure evolution after the closing of the gap for all the high-symmetry points and lines for the 138 space ...
... no level repulsion between the valence and the conduction bands belonging to the different irreps. One hundred thirty-eight inversion-asymmetric space groups We can similarly calculate band structure evolution after the closing of the gap for all the high-symmetry points and lines for the 138 space ...
Quantum Computation and Quantum Information
... and the state is mathematically defined to be a unit vector in some complex Hilbert space. The number of complex numbers required to characterize the quantum state usually grows exponentially with the size of the system, rather than linearly, as occurs in classical systems. As a consequence, it take ...
... and the state is mathematically defined to be a unit vector in some complex Hilbert space. The number of complex numbers required to characterize the quantum state usually grows exponentially with the size of the system, rather than linearly, as occurs in classical systems. As a consequence, it take ...
MODULE MAPS OVER LOCALLY COMPACT QUANTUM GROUPS
... be the convolution quantum group algebra of G. If we let C0 (G) be the reduced C ∗ -algebra associated with G, then its operator dual M (G) is a faithful completely contractive Banach algebra containing L1 (G) as an ideal. It has been shown in the recent work [26, 27, 29] that many important results ...
... be the convolution quantum group algebra of G. If we let C0 (G) be the reduced C ∗ -algebra associated with G, then its operator dual M (G) is a faithful completely contractive Banach algebra containing L1 (G) as an ideal. It has been shown in the recent work [26, 27, 29] that many important results ...
Page 12 - at www.arxiv.org.
... theorem and ii) The causal asymmetry between weak and strong measurements. The EPR-Bell experiment proves that one particle's spin outcome depends on the choice of the spin-orientation to be measured on the other particle, and its outcome thereof. Relativistic locality is not necessarily violated in ...
... theorem and ii) The causal asymmetry between weak and strong measurements. The EPR-Bell experiment proves that one particle's spin outcome depends on the choice of the spin-orientation to be measured on the other particle, and its outcome thereof. Relativistic locality is not necessarily violated in ...