Unscrambling the Quantum Omelette
... [26]. Other weak forms of the KS theorem allow twovalued measures, alas they may be too scarce to, for instance, be able to separate all observables; and to allow a homeomorphic embedding into Boolean algebras. A formalism defining partial frame functions, similar to the one developed in Ref. [27, 2 ...
... [26]. Other weak forms of the KS theorem allow twovalued measures, alas they may be too scarce to, for instance, be able to separate all observables; and to allow a homeomorphic embedding into Boolean algebras. A formalism defining partial frame functions, similar to the one developed in Ref. [27, 2 ...
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... the orbit of Uranus, to predict the general location of the perturbing planet now known as Neptune. Perturbation theory is used to estimate the energies and wave functions for a quantum system described by a potential which is only slightly different than a potential with a known solution. The approa ...
... the orbit of Uranus, to predict the general location of the perturbing planet now known as Neptune. Perturbation theory is used to estimate the energies and wave functions for a quantum system described by a potential which is only slightly different than a potential with a known solution. The approa ...
The Hydrogen Atom: a Review on the Birth of Modern Quantum
... one’s own phase velocity. In that case we define group velocity the following quantity: ...
... one’s own phase velocity. In that case we define group velocity the following quantity: ...
Exceptional Points and Dynamical Phase Transitions
... the regime of overlapping resonances. Here, shortlived and long-lived resonance states coexist, i.e. they are not clearly separated from one another in the time scale. In nuclear physics, this regime is described well ...
... the regime of overlapping resonances. Here, shortlived and long-lived resonance states coexist, i.e. they are not clearly separated from one another in the time scale. In nuclear physics, this regime is described well ...
Quantum Parallelism (The Abstract of a Tutorial)
... process classical information and we wish to compute all values of a function f (x) of a binary vector x of length n we need either: one copy of the circuit and 2n time steps (assuming that it takes one time step to compute the value of the function for one argument), or one time step and 2n copies ...
... process classical information and we wish to compute all values of a function f (x) of a binary vector x of length n we need either: one copy of the circuit and 2n time steps (assuming that it takes one time step to compute the value of the function for one argument), or one time step and 2n copies ...
1 THE TECHNIQUE OF SIGNIFICABLES A proposed complete
... physical conditions α and β of S. And note that it will follow very straightforwardly from the sorts of considerations we have just been through that α and β can only be observationally distinguished from one another if there is at least one physically possible initial condition of G+R on which G en ...
... physical conditions α and β of S. And note that it will follow very straightforwardly from the sorts of considerations we have just been through that α and β can only be observationally distinguished from one another if there is at least one physically possible initial condition of G+R on which G en ...
Problem of the Week
... The area of a rectangle is equal to the product of its length times its width. a) What are the possible dimensions of a rectangle of area 60 cm2 ? Fill in the first two columns of the given table, using width as the lesser dimension and length as the greater. b) Which of these possible rectangles, i ...
... The area of a rectangle is equal to the product of its length times its width. a) What are the possible dimensions of a rectangle of area 60 cm2 ? Fill in the first two columns of the given table, using width as the lesser dimension and length as the greater. b) Which of these possible rectangles, i ...
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... Many different people with different ways of looking at the same thing. • The same thing could appear differently to different observers. This is what Einstein adopted for his relativity. • However, Kant insisted that there exists an absolute thing, called Ding an Sich. ...
... Many different people with different ways of looking at the same thing. • The same thing could appear differently to different observers. This is what Einstein adopted for his relativity. • However, Kant insisted that there exists an absolute thing, called Ding an Sich. ...