Arrangement of the Electrons Chapter 4
... off continually in the infrared (IR) region of the spectrum. ...
... off continually in the infrared (IR) region of the spectrum. ...
Quantum Computing with Molecules
... the opposite, antiparallel direction. A pulse of half that duration would leave the particles with an equal probability of being aligned parallel or antiparallel. In quantum-mechanical terms, the spins would be in both states, 0 and 1, simultaneously. The usual classical rendition of this situation ...
... the opposite, antiparallel direction. A pulse of half that duration would leave the particles with an equal probability of being aligned parallel or antiparallel. In quantum-mechanical terms, the spins would be in both states, 0 and 1, simultaneously. The usual classical rendition of this situation ...
Particle in a box
... Particle confined to a fixed region of space e.g. ball in a tube- ball moves only along length L ...
... Particle confined to a fixed region of space e.g. ball in a tube- ball moves only along length L ...
Symposium: “Condensed Matter Physics and Optics” Monday
... through high and broad poential barriers with a high probability (Klein tunneling). This allows to study subtle effects of relativistic quantum mechanics and quantum field theory in condensed-matter experiments, without accelerators and colliders. Some of these effects were considered as practically ...
... through high and broad poential barriers with a high probability (Klein tunneling). This allows to study subtle effects of relativistic quantum mechanics and quantum field theory in condensed-matter experiments, without accelerators and colliders. Some of these effects were considered as practically ...
abstract.
... strongly linked with the feeling that, as Michel Le Bellac puts it, “even if the non-locality of quantum mechanics is not in contradiction with special relativity, at best, what we observe is a kind of pacific coexistence between them”[3]. The author wondered - and still does - whether the possibili ...
... strongly linked with the feeling that, as Michel Le Bellac puts it, “even if the non-locality of quantum mechanics is not in contradiction with special relativity, at best, what we observe is a kind of pacific coexistence between them”[3]. The author wondered - and still does - whether the possibili ...
The Quantum Jump Approach and Quantum Trajectories, Springer
... (iii) Jump: With the detection of a photon the atom has to be reset to the appropriate state. For example, a two-level atom will be in its ground state right after a photon detection. The general reset state for systems at rest has been determined in Refs. [6, 12] and is given in the next section. ...
... (iii) Jump: With the detection of a photon the atom has to be reset to the appropriate state. For example, a two-level atom will be in its ground state right after a photon detection. The general reset state for systems at rest has been determined in Refs. [6, 12] and is given in the next section. ...
Ohmic vs Markovian heat bath — two-page
... Xt becomes a classical white-noise: hXt Xu istoch = 2ηkB T δ(t − u). Now, replacing q̂ by q would yield the classical Langevin equation, its solution q(t) at V = 0 would be the Ornstein-Uhlenbeck stochastic process which is nonMarkovian itself. Fortunately, the pair of phase space coordinates satisf ...
... Xt becomes a classical white-noise: hXt Xu istoch = 2ηkB T δ(t − u). Now, replacing q̂ by q would yield the classical Langevin equation, its solution q(t) at V = 0 would be the Ornstein-Uhlenbeck stochastic process which is nonMarkovian itself. Fortunately, the pair of phase space coordinates satisf ...
G020271-00
... Measurement of its position at a p2 later time uncertain since x(t ) exp( i 2m t ) x(0) ...
... Measurement of its position at a p2 later time uncertain since x(t ) exp( i 2m t ) x(0) ...
Rabi oscillations
... As we discussed in connection to the Bloch sphere, any single qubit gate can be performed by three consecutive rotations along two non-parallel axes. Thus, arbitrary single qubit gates can be performed by quickly changing the gate voltage between two different values, e.g. from the degeneracy point ...
... As we discussed in connection to the Bloch sphere, any single qubit gate can be performed by three consecutive rotations along two non-parallel axes. Thus, arbitrary single qubit gates can be performed by quickly changing the gate voltage between two different values, e.g. from the degeneracy point ...
Quantum Theory
... •V is the potential energy and is a function of x, y and z. The probability of finding the electron decreases as you move away from the center of the nucleus. ...
... •V is the potential energy and is a function of x, y and z. The probability of finding the electron decreases as you move away from the center of the nucleus. ...
Fourth lecture, 28.10.03 (dispersion cancellation, time measurement
... all times at which D1 and D2 could fire: UGH! Each E is an integral over its own frequency! But... if T goes to infinity, life simplifies: We have only to integrate a†a†aa over all w1, w2. The physical meaning: calculate the probability for each pair of frequencies which might reach the two detector ...
... all times at which D1 and D2 could fire: UGH! Each E is an integral over its own frequency! But... if T goes to infinity, life simplifies: We have only to integrate a†a†aa over all w1, w2. The physical meaning: calculate the probability for each pair of frequencies which might reach the two detector ...
Asymptotic Freedom: From Paradox to Paradigm
... two great theories of twentieth-century physics. Both are very successful. But these two theories are based on entirely different ideas, which are not easy to reconcile. In particular, special relativity puts space and time on the same footing, but quantum mechanics treats them very differently. Thi ...
... two great theories of twentieth-century physics. Both are very successful. But these two theories are based on entirely different ideas, which are not easy to reconcile. In particular, special relativity puts space and time on the same footing, but quantum mechanics treats them very differently. Thi ...