
An Introduction to QBism with an Application to the Locality of
... judgment of the agent assigning that state.13 The notorious “collapse of the wave-function” is nothing but the updating of an agent’s state assignment on the basis of her experience. Acting as an agent, Alice can use the formalism of quantum mechanics to model any physical system external to herself ...
... judgment of the agent assigning that state.13 The notorious “collapse of the wave-function” is nothing but the updating of an agent’s state assignment on the basis of her experience. Acting as an agent, Alice can use the formalism of quantum mechanics to model any physical system external to herself ...
Unitarity and Effective Field Theory Results in Quantum Gravity
... We see that we have universality between scalars and photons only for the ‘Newton’ and ‘post-Newtonian’ contributions Quantum part seems to violate universality (can been seen as a ...
... We see that we have universality between scalars and photons only for the ‘Newton’ and ‘post-Newtonian’ contributions Quantum part seems to violate universality (can been seen as a ...
Majorana and the path-integral approach to Quantum Mechanics
... spontaneous symmetry breaking). In fact for large values of S compared to h̄, the phase factor in (5) undergoes large fluctuations and thus contributes with terms which average to zero. From a mathematical point of view, it is then clear that in the limit h̄ → 0 the dominant contribution to Eq. (5) ...
... spontaneous symmetry breaking). In fact for large values of S compared to h̄, the phase factor in (5) undergoes large fluctuations and thus contributes with terms which average to zero. From a mathematical point of view, it is then clear that in the limit h̄ → 0 the dominant contribution to Eq. (5) ...
Quantum Physics 2005 Notes-2 The State Function and its Interpretation
... Notes-2 The State Function and its Interpretation Notes 2 ...
... Notes-2 The State Function and its Interpretation Notes 2 ...
Chapter 3
... The subject then happened to arise in conversation between Schrodinger and Debye. Both professed not to have understood the work. Result: Debye proposed that Schrödinger should give a colloquium about it! This he did in November or December 1925 as one of their current joint E.T.H.-University series ...
... The subject then happened to arise in conversation between Schrodinger and Debye. Both professed not to have understood the work. Result: Debye proposed that Schrödinger should give a colloquium about it! This he did in November or December 1925 as one of their current joint E.T.H.-University series ...
Quantum Computing
... and in order to represent it with an arbitrary amount of precision one requires an arbitrary number of bits to specify the two complex numbers α0 and α1 [1]. In the case of Qbits, the logic gates that are applied are unitary matrices. These matrices are basically rotations that act on a Qbit, and as ...
... and in order to represent it with an arbitrary amount of precision one requires an arbitrary number of bits to specify the two complex numbers α0 and α1 [1]. In the case of Qbits, the logic gates that are applied are unitary matrices. These matrices are basically rotations that act on a Qbit, and as ...
Fermionic quantum criticality and the fractal nodal surface
... Just Ansatz or physics? Mott transition, continuous metal ...
... Just Ansatz or physics? Mott transition, continuous metal ...
A Gentle Introduction to Quantum Computing
... In the following sections, I present an introductory level explanation of quantum computing. ...
... In the following sections, I present an introductory level explanation of quantum computing. ...
Wilson-Sommerfeld quantization rule revisited
... been pursued to gain new insight. The rule is shown to provide states that satisfy several well-known theorems of standard quantum mechanics. A few other useful results and scaling relations are also derived. They emerge to act as nice guiding rules of thumb in the course of rigorous computations. C ...
... been pursued to gain new insight. The rule is shown to provide states that satisfy several well-known theorems of standard quantum mechanics. A few other useful results and scaling relations are also derived. They emerge to act as nice guiding rules of thumb in the course of rigorous computations. C ...
Quantum spin liquids as soft-
... The number of electrons in a BCS wavefunction is not fixed. There can be 0, 1, or 2 electrons in a lattice site. The Gutzwiller projection removes all the double occupied components. An insulator state is obtained when # of electron = # of lattice sites. ...
... The number of electrons in a BCS wavefunction is not fixed. There can be 0, 1, or 2 electrons in a lattice site. The Gutzwiller projection removes all the double occupied components. An insulator state is obtained when # of electron = # of lattice sites. ...
lowdin`s remarks on the aufbau principle and a philosopher`s view of
... said to have described it as "ab initio", implying that the whole of that particular project had been carried out from the beginning in his laboratory. Very soon the term was being used for all kinds of accurate theoretical work which, at least at first sight, did not involve any fixing of paramente ...
... said to have described it as "ab initio", implying that the whole of that particular project had been carried out from the beginning in his laboratory. Very soon the term was being used for all kinds of accurate theoretical work which, at least at first sight, did not involve any fixing of paramente ...
Scientific Papers
... other 50% is that it will not decay in the time allotted, so we would have absolutely no idea whether or not the cat would have died. Thus, we assume its matter was coexisting on two planes at once and neither living nor dying, but also both at the same time. “Albert Einstein was fond of asking, ‘Do ...
... other 50% is that it will not decay in the time allotted, so we would have absolutely no idea whether or not the cat would have died. Thus, we assume its matter was coexisting on two planes at once and neither living nor dying, but also both at the same time. “Albert Einstein was fond of asking, ‘Do ...
Anderson transition ???????? Critical Statistics
... In billiards it is just the ballistic travel time. In kicked rotors and quantum maps it is the time needed to explore a fixed basis. In billiards with some (Coulomb) a potential inside one can obtain this time by mapping the billiard onto an Anderson model. ...
... In billiards it is just the ballistic travel time. In kicked rotors and quantum maps it is the time needed to explore a fixed basis. In billiards with some (Coulomb) a potential inside one can obtain this time by mapping the billiard onto an Anderson model. ...
Mixed quantum and classical processes in strong fields
... laboratory instruments. Quantum processes occur on a time scale whose magnitude is governed by the Heisenberg uncertainty principle. In contrast, processes occurring on a classical time scale can be measured explicitly. For example, strong fields employed in atomic and molecular physics are usually ...
... laboratory instruments. Quantum processes occur on a time scale whose magnitude is governed by the Heisenberg uncertainty principle. In contrast, processes occurring on a classical time scale can be measured explicitly. For example, strong fields employed in atomic and molecular physics are usually ...
A Rough Guide to Quantum Chaos
... If the alarming discrepancy between classical chaos and the prediction of quantum mechanics was only caused by an “incorrect definition of chaos”, the interest in quantum chaos would be rather superficial, a pedagogical curiosity at most, but would certainly not deserve the attention it is presentl ...
... If the alarming discrepancy between classical chaos and the prediction of quantum mechanics was only caused by an “incorrect definition of chaos”, the interest in quantum chaos would be rather superficial, a pedagogical curiosity at most, but would certainly not deserve the attention it is presentl ...