
Another version - Scott Aaronson
... In general, we consider a network of beamsplitters, with n input “modes” (locations) and m>>n output modes n identical photons enter, one per input mode Assume for simplicity they all leave in ...
... In general, we consider a network of beamsplitters, with n input “modes” (locations) and m>>n output modes n identical photons enter, one per input mode Assume for simplicity they all leave in ...
Word
... 2. The "boundary" of the universe at time = 0 (the "Big Bang") of classical cosmology The Penrose-Hawking Singularity Theorem - proved that in all cosmological models based on General Relativity, a "singularity" at time = 0 is inevitable - "singularity" at time = 0: the fabric of space and time is u ...
... 2. The "boundary" of the universe at time = 0 (the "Big Bang") of classical cosmology The Penrose-Hawking Singularity Theorem - proved that in all cosmological models based on General Relativity, a "singularity" at time = 0 is inevitable - "singularity" at time = 0: the fabric of space and time is u ...
presentation source
... Dynamical properties say what would happen, even if it does not: A force says what acceleration would be caused if a mass was acted on. Electric fields generates a force if and when a charge is present. Quantum propensities give probabilities if a measurement is performed. ...
... Dynamical properties say what would happen, even if it does not: A force says what acceleration would be caused if a mass was acted on. Electric fields generates a force if and when a charge is present. Quantum propensities give probabilities if a measurement is performed. ...
Another version - Scott Aaronson
... A.-Ambainis 2011: Massive generalization of collision lower bound. If f is any problem whatsoever that’s symmetric under permuting the inputs and outputs, and has sufficiently many outputs (like the collision problem), then f’s classical query complexity (f’s quantum query complexity)7 Compare to ...
... A.-Ambainis 2011: Massive generalization of collision lower bound. If f is any problem whatsoever that’s symmetric under permuting the inputs and outputs, and has sufficiently many outputs (like the collision problem), then f’s classical query complexity (f’s quantum query complexity)7 Compare to ...
Document
... for Alice and Bob, we can define when the statistics of Alice’s and Bob’s measurement results demonstrate these forms of nonlocality. (HMW, Jones & Doherty, PRL’07) • They demonstrate Bell-nonlocality iff their results could not have arisen from correlations between a random local hidden variable (L ...
... for Alice and Bob, we can define when the statistics of Alice’s and Bob’s measurement results demonstrate these forms of nonlocality. (HMW, Jones & Doherty, PRL’07) • They demonstrate Bell-nonlocality iff their results could not have arisen from correlations between a random local hidden variable (L ...
Document
... promised one of these to be the case where b ≥ 1/poly(n) Equivalently, write it more SAT-like ...
... promised one of these to be the case where b ≥ 1/poly(n) Equivalently, write it more SAT-like ...
conical pendulum lab Word document
... 6. Showing all steps, use the derived formula for “g” to find the experimental measured magnitude of the earth's gravitational field strength to the correct number of significant digits. 7. Using the reading in question #2 as a guide, and showing all steps, find the percentage uncertainty in the mea ...
... 6. Showing all steps, use the derived formula for “g” to find the experimental measured magnitude of the earth's gravitational field strength to the correct number of significant digits. 7. Using the reading in question #2 as a guide, and showing all steps, find the percentage uncertainty in the mea ...
A paradox in quantum measurement theory - Philsci
... detection rate at A alters depending on this choice, then it seems that the rate of detection at B must also change, because the total detection rate must be constant. The problem is that we can separate the screens A and B to an arbitrary distance, so the respective measurement events are space-lik ...
... detection rate at A alters depending on this choice, then it seems that the rate of detection at B must also change, because the total detection rate must be constant. The problem is that we can separate the screens A and B to an arbitrary distance, so the respective measurement events are space-lik ...
PowerPoint 演示文稿 - Shandong University
... The Schrödinger equation and its solution We solve the Schrödinger equation by setting the boundary condition that the wave function should be smoothly continuous at every point of the coordinate space and should converge to 0 at the infinitely long distance. Then we have a set of discrete energy e ...
... The Schrödinger equation and its solution We solve the Schrödinger equation by setting the boundary condition that the wave function should be smoothly continuous at every point of the coordinate space and should converge to 0 at the infinitely long distance. Then we have a set of discrete energy e ...
Slide 1
... could “merely” break RSA, simulate quantum physics, etc.—not solve generic search problems exponentially faster 3. In this talk, I’ll tell you about some of the known limits of quantum computers ...
... could “merely” break RSA, simulate quantum physics, etc.—not solve generic search problems exponentially faster 3. In this talk, I’ll tell you about some of the known limits of quantum computers ...
The Future of Computer Science
... A.-Ambainis 2011: Massive generalization of collision lower bound. If f is any problem whatsoever that’s symmetric under permuting the inputs and outputs, and has sufficiently many outputs (like the collision problem), then f’s classical query complexity (f’s quantum query complexity)7 Compare to ...
... A.-Ambainis 2011: Massive generalization of collision lower bound. If f is any problem whatsoever that’s symmetric under permuting the inputs and outputs, and has sufficiently many outputs (like the collision problem), then f’s classical query complexity (f’s quantum query complexity)7 Compare to ...
Can nature be q-deformed?
... „ … the introduction of space-time continuum may be considered as contrary to nature in view of the molecular structure […] on a small scale … we must give up … the space-time continuum. … human ingenuity will someday find methods … to proceed such a path.“ (Albert Einstein) ...
... „ … the introduction of space-time continuum may be considered as contrary to nature in view of the molecular structure […] on a small scale … we must give up … the space-time continuum. … human ingenuity will someday find methods … to proceed such a path.“ (Albert Einstein) ...
rtf
... Information processing is concerned today with very large quantities of very complex data. The complexity arises from the diversity of the type of data and the relationships between data and the different types of relationships. At present semantic complexity can only be processed at the surface lev ...
... Information processing is concerned today with very large quantities of very complex data. The complexity arises from the diversity of the type of data and the relationships between data and the different types of relationships. At present semantic complexity can only be processed at the surface lev ...
MODULE 1
... Their wavefunctions flicker between the real and the imaginary, but the probability density is constant with time. ...
... Their wavefunctions flicker between the real and the imaginary, but the probability density is constant with time. ...