Investigating incompatibility: How to reconcile complementarity with EPR C
... reply to EPR is incompatible with EPR. This is exactly what it was intended to be right from the start and it would not be a reply in his mind if it weren’t. But do their entire views have to conflict? For my purpose is not to reconcile Bohr’s reply to EPR with EPR itself, which is out of the questi ...
... reply to EPR is incompatible with EPR. This is exactly what it was intended to be right from the start and it would not be a reply in his mind if it weren’t. But do their entire views have to conflict? For my purpose is not to reconcile Bohr’s reply to EPR with EPR itself, which is out of the questi ...
arXiv:gr-qc/9901024 v1 8 Jan 1999 - Philsci
... or more often, some relation similar to (usually weaker than) reduction; as in ‘the mental properties of a person emerge from their physical properties’; or ‘the laws of chemistry emerge from the basic equations of physics’. We shall discuss the notion of emergence (and reduction) in more detail in ...
... or more often, some relation similar to (usually weaker than) reduction; as in ‘the mental properties of a person emerge from their physical properties’; or ‘the laws of chemistry emerge from the basic equations of physics’. We shall discuss the notion of emergence (and reduction) in more detail in ...
An exponential separation between quantum and classical one
... Unfortunately not yet... for every group G people have considered so far (e.g. abelian groups), there is in fact a more clever O(log |G|) bit classical protocol! The complexity of the general problem has been an open problem for some time [Aaronson et al ’09]... now it’s even considered to be a “sem ...
... Unfortunately not yet... for every group G people have considered so far (e.g. abelian groups), there is in fact a more clever O(log |G|) bit classical protocol! The complexity of the general problem has been an open problem for some time [Aaronson et al ’09]... now it’s even considered to be a “sem ...
Conjugation coinvariants of quantum matrices
... Remark 6.4 We expect that the same results hold also when q is a root of unity. In fact, we can derive the conclusion that Chσ1 , . . . , σN i is a commutative polynomial subalgebra of the algebra of coinvariants in the general case from our restricted result. However, we cannot at the moment show t ...
... Remark 6.4 We expect that the same results hold also when q is a root of unity. In fact, we can derive the conclusion that Chσ1 , . . . , σN i is a commutative polynomial subalgebra of the algebra of coinvariants in the general case from our restricted result. However, we cannot at the moment show t ...
The Light of Existence
... of space but not yet the static something of matter. This chapter deduces the properties of light from a processing model, including its ability to be a wave or a particle, to detect objects it didn't physically touch, to take all paths to a destination, to choose a path after it arrives and to spin ...
... of space but not yet the static something of matter. This chapter deduces the properties of light from a processing model, including its ability to be a wave or a particle, to detect objects it didn't physically touch, to take all paths to a destination, to choose a path after it arrives and to spin ...
What classicality? Decoherence and Bohr`s classical concepts
... case is spin. Spin is a truly quantum-mechanical quantity, and therefore spin observables are not classical per se. But one may say that spin is largely analogous to the concept of angular momentum in classical physics, and it is in this sense that spin observables are often regarded as residing on ...
... case is spin. Spin is a truly quantum-mechanical quantity, and therefore spin observables are not classical per se. But one may say that spin is largely analogous to the concept of angular momentum in classical physics, and it is in this sense that spin observables are often regarded as residing on ...
Copenhagen interpretation From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
... rather, only the function of registering decisions, i.e., processes in space and time, and it does not matter whether the observer is an apparatus or a human being; but the registration, i.e., the transition from the "possible" to the "actual," is absolutely necessary here and cannot be omitted from ...
... rather, only the function of registering decisions, i.e., processes in space and time, and it does not matter whether the observer is an apparatus or a human being; but the registration, i.e., the transition from the "possible" to the "actual," is absolutely necessary here and cannot be omitted from ...
pdf
... fine-grained levels, we show that our algorithms can effectively analyze large-scale QC benchmarks and generate schedules that are comparable to their estimated critical path lengths. • We propose and evaluate communication-aware scheduling al- ...
... fine-grained levels, we show that our algorithms can effectively analyze large-scale QC benchmarks and generate schedules that are comparable to their estimated critical path lengths. • We propose and evaluate communication-aware scheduling al- ...
Modeling and Control of Quantum Systems: An Introduction
... results, but allows for a more consistent presentation and, in our opinion, a closer connection to classical control theory. Some of the topics related to measurement and feedback could certainly be presented in a quantum probability framework in a more rigorous way, as it has been recently done by ...
... results, but allows for a more consistent presentation and, in our opinion, a closer connection to classical control theory. Some of the topics related to measurement and feedback could certainly be presented in a quantum probability framework in a more rigorous way, as it has been recently done by ...