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Paper

Quantum Cryptography
Quantum Cryptography

Chapter 9d Introduction to Quantum Mechanics
Chapter 9d Introduction to Quantum Mechanics

... than the electron and the proton is taken as stationary. So the electron moves in the electrical field of the proton. The electrostatic potential energy in such a ...
1 = A
1 = A

... A little more about SU(n) groups in a context of dynamical symmetries Mathematically SU(n) is a group of unitary matrices of n-th rank. In nanophysics one frequently deals with the groups SU(3) and SU(4). SU(3) group describes all interlevel transitions in a three-level system. Its generators are s ...
PPT - Fernando Brandao
PPT - Fernando Brandao

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AGAINST THE COPENHAGEN ORTHODOXY The

... science. The problem is that even today, almost 90 years after its birth, there is not a general agreement about the world view it provides. It is not that traditional physics did not encounter problems of this kind. Not at all. For instance, the meaning of Newton’s second law (the well known equati ...
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A brief history of the mathematical equivalence between the two

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I t

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LOSS OF COHERENCE IN GATE-CONTROLLED QUBIT SYSTEMS

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PSEUDO-FERMIONIC COHERENT STATES OMAR CHERBAL AND MAHREZ DRIR

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Michael - Southeast Missouri State University

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slides on Quantum Isometry Groups

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Quantum fluctuations can promote or inhibit glass formation

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Lecture 4

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CHEMISTRY 120A FALL 2006

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The D-Wave Quantum Computer - D

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CHEMISTRY 120A FALL 2006 Lectures: MWF 10

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Correlation Length versus Gap in Frustration-Free

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Beginning & Intermediate Algebra. 4ed

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Physics 451 Quantum Mechanics

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Quantum Mechanics and Closed Timelike Curves

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Electrons in Atoms

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Irreversibility and Quantum Mechanics?

2005-q-0035-Postulates-of-quantum-mechanics
2005-q-0035-Postulates-of-quantum-mechanics

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Quantum group

In mathematics and theoretical physics, the term quantum group denotes various kinds of noncommutative algebra with additional structure. In general, a quantum group is some kind of Hopf algebra. There is no single, all-encompassing definition, but instead a family of broadly similar objects.The term ""quantum group"" first appeared in the theory of quantum integrable systems, which was then formalized by Vladimir Drinfeld and Michio Jimbo as a particular class of Hopf algebra. The same term is also used for other Hopf algebras that deform or are close to classical Lie groups or Lie algebras, such as a `bicrossproduct' class of quantum groups introduced by Shahn Majid a little after the work of Drinfeld and Jimbo.In Drinfeld's approach, quantum groups arise as Hopf algebras depending on an auxiliary parameter q or h, which become universal enveloping algebras of a certain Lie algebra, frequently semisimple or affine, when q = 1 or h = 0. Closely related are certain dual objects, also Hopf algebras and also called quantum groups, deforming the algebra of functions on the corresponding semisimple algebraic group or a compact Lie group.Just as groups often appear as symmetries, quantum groups act on many other mathematical objects and it has become fashionable to introduce the adjective quantum in such cases; for example there are quantum planes and quantum Grassmannians.
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