
Nicolas Gisin - Quantum Nonlocality
... Matters a competent Faculty of thinking, can ever fall into it. Gravity must be caused by an Agent acting constantly according to certain Laws, but whether this Agent be material or immaterial, I have left to the Consideration of my Readers. ...
... Matters a competent Faculty of thinking, can ever fall into it. Gravity must be caused by an Agent acting constantly according to certain Laws, but whether this Agent be material or immaterial, I have left to the Consideration of my Readers. ...
arXiv:1310.3262v1 [quant-ph] 11 Oct 2013
... Shortly thereafter, Bennett, Brassard, Breidbard, and Wiesner [BBBW83] presented another protocol where Alice can learn either bit with probability cos2 (π/8) and the other bit is hidden afterwards. This protocol differs from our definition by sacrificing completeness in exchange for soundness, but ...
... Shortly thereafter, Bennett, Brassard, Breidbard, and Wiesner [BBBW83] presented another protocol where Alice can learn either bit with probability cos2 (π/8) and the other bit is hidden afterwards. This protocol differs from our definition by sacrificing completeness in exchange for soundness, but ...
Cooling and Trapping Neutral Atoms
... 8. The Role of Interactions in Quantum Reflection of Bose-Einstein Condensates Quantum reflection is the phenomena by which an atom is accelerated so abruptly by the Casimir-Polder potential that it reflects from the potential rather than being drawn into the surface. The usual model of quantum refl ...
... 8. The Role of Interactions in Quantum Reflection of Bose-Einstein Condensates Quantum reflection is the phenomena by which an atom is accelerated so abruptly by the Casimir-Polder potential that it reflects from the potential rather than being drawn into the surface. The usual model of quantum refl ...
Double Honours Biochemistry - Physics Degree Program Year 1
... CHEM 4360 / MBIO 3410 / MBIO 3450 ...
... CHEM 4360 / MBIO 3410 / MBIO 3450 ...
Direct Characterization of Quantum Dynamics: General Theory
... a fundamental relationship between QED and QPT, namely whether it is possible to completely characterize the quantum dynamics of arbitrary quantum systems using QED. And, providing the answer is affirmative, how the physical resources scale with system size. Moreover, one would like to understand wh ...
... a fundamental relationship between QED and QPT, namely whether it is possible to completely characterize the quantum dynamics of arbitrary quantum systems using QED. And, providing the answer is affirmative, how the physical resources scale with system size. Moreover, one would like to understand wh ...
Conjugation coinvariants of quantum matrices
... induces an action of GL(N, C) on the coordinate algebra C[X ij ] of N × N matrices. The invariant functions with respect to this action are well-known, they are the elements in the C-subalgebra of C[Xij ] that is generated by the trace functions σi , for i = 1, . . . , N, where σi is the sum of the ...
... induces an action of GL(N, C) on the coordinate algebra C[X ij ] of N × N matrices. The invariant functions with respect to this action are well-known, they are the elements in the C-subalgebra of C[Xij ] that is generated by the trace functions σi , for i = 1, . . . , N, where σi is the sum of the ...
1 Why do we need position operator in quantum theory?
... experiment is again given only in terms of momenta and conclusions about the spatial distribution can be drawn only if we assume additionally how the position operator is expressed in terms of momentum variables. On quantum level the physical meaning of such a spatial distribution is not fundamenta ...
... experiment is again given only in terms of momenta and conclusions about the spatial distribution can be drawn only if we assume additionally how the position operator is expressed in terms of momentum variables. On quantum level the physical meaning of such a spatial distribution is not fundamenta ...
Supmech: the Geometro-statistical Formalism Underlying Quantum
... ω(..., KX, ...) = Kω(..., X, ...) where K is in the center of the algebra; for notation, see section III] is also incorporated. Moreover, to accommodate fermionic objects on an equal footing with the bosonic ones, the scheme developed here is based on superalgebras. The scheme of mechanics develope ...
... ω(..., KX, ...) = Kω(..., X, ...) where K is in the center of the algebra; for notation, see section III] is also incorporated. Moreover, to accommodate fermionic objects on an equal footing with the bosonic ones, the scheme developed here is based on superalgebras. The scheme of mechanics develope ...
Hydrogen 2
... with 7 possible z-components, mL = -3, -2, -1, 0, 1, 2, 3. The angular momentum vector will make the minimum angle with the z-axis when the z-component is as large as possible, 3 ...
... with 7 possible z-components, mL = -3, -2, -1, 0, 1, 2, 3. The angular momentum vector will make the minimum angle with the z-axis when the z-component is as large as possible, 3 ...
ABSTRACT Title of Document:
... “persistence through time” as putative philosophical questions in their own right, which can be investigated more or less independently of the details (or history of) science – i.e., systematic empirical inquiry. I shall dub this the “first tradition”. Roughly at the same time as we saw the rise of ...
... “persistence through time” as putative philosophical questions in their own right, which can be investigated more or less independently of the details (or history of) science – i.e., systematic empirical inquiry. I shall dub this the “first tradition”. Roughly at the same time as we saw the rise of ...