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Quantum Mechanical Model
Quantum Mechanical Model

Slides from Lecture 9-11
Slides from Lecture 9-11

Chemistry 871/671/495, Structure and Bonding
Chemistry 871/671/495, Structure and Bonding

Coherent Control
Coherent Control

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Quantum gravity

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Quantum Mechanics as dissolver of the sensate universe: this is

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Quantum phase transition - Condensed Matter Theory and Quantum

... Quantum phase transition: scale invariance and universality ...
Quantum systems in one-dimension and quantum transport
Quantum systems in one-dimension and quantum transport

here - Dalibor Hrg
here - Dalibor Hrg

We now extend the trace distance and fidelity to the quantum case
We now extend the trace distance and fidelity to the quantum case

Problem Set 11
Problem Set 11

Variations on Quantum Theory
Variations on Quantum Theory

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A quantum thermal machine

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20060906140015001

Chapter 1 Statistical Mechanics of Quantum Dots Chapter 2 Artificial
Chapter 1 Statistical Mechanics of Quantum Dots Chapter 2 Artificial

Another version - Scott Aaronson
Another version - Scott Aaronson

... Where we are now: A quantum computer has factored 21 into 37, with high probability (Martín-López et al. 2012) Why is scaling up so hard? Because of decoherence: unwanted interaction between a QC and its external environment, “prematurely measuring” the quantum state A few skeptics, in CS and physi ...
Finite T Dynamics of 1D Integrable Systems
Finite T Dynamics of 1D Integrable Systems

Many Worlds Theory/ `Relative State` formation of Quantum Mechanics
Many Worlds Theory/ `Relative State` formation of Quantum Mechanics

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Course Syllabus

Atomic Spectroscopy and the Correspondence Principle
Atomic Spectroscopy and the Correspondence Principle

vu_quantum_physics_research_report
vu_quantum_physics_research_report

PH 5840 Quantum Computation and Quantum Information
PH 5840 Quantum Computation and Quantum Information

Document
Document

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Ex 2

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12/6/16 - Physics

... “Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle” ...
< 1 ... 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 ... 245 >

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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