PDF - at www.arxiv.org.
... The creation of a quantum computer is an outstanding fundamental and practical problem. The quantum computer could be used for the execution of very complicated tasks which are not solvable with the classical computers. The first prototype of a solid state quantum computer was created in 2009 with s ...
... The creation of a quantum computer is an outstanding fundamental and practical problem. The quantum computer could be used for the execution of very complicated tasks which are not solvable with the classical computers. The first prototype of a solid state quantum computer was created in 2009 with s ...
Rewriting the Rydberg Formula
... When I say pull, I mean an apparent pull caused by field differentials. In a strictly mechanical sense, there are no pulls, and I am not changing that. But the drawn arrow is created by the field potentials, and in the interaction between electron and proton, it will indeed create the appearance of ...
... When I say pull, I mean an apparent pull caused by field differentials. In a strictly mechanical sense, there are no pulls, and I am not changing that. But the drawn arrow is created by the field potentials, and in the interaction between electron and proton, it will indeed create the appearance of ...
N.M. Atakishiyev, S.M. Chumakov, A.L. Rivera y K.B. Wolf
... transformation, as follows directly from the phase volume conservation. In quantum dynamics, these moments are preserved by any linear canonical transformation but are changed by nonlinear transformations. For all the quasiclassical states described by Gaussian wave functions, these moments (in our ...
... transformation, as follows directly from the phase volume conservation. In quantum dynamics, these moments are preserved by any linear canonical transformation but are changed by nonlinear transformations. For all the quasiclassical states described by Gaussian wave functions, these moments (in our ...
26_IJFPS_March_2012_..
... quanta from which the image was made (Martin, Sharp, & Sutton, 1999), which can also be viewed as the fraction of photons that are detected “correctly” (Prince & Links, 2006). Screen-films which are used in projection radiography systems utilizing X-rays are one of the famous radiology techniques wh ...
... quanta from which the image was made (Martin, Sharp, & Sutton, 1999), which can also be viewed as the fraction of photons that are detected “correctly” (Prince & Links, 2006). Screen-films which are used in projection radiography systems utilizing X-rays are one of the famous radiology techniques wh ...
Experimental Test of Wave-Particle Duality by Single Neutral Atoms
... a faint laser [18], and the result obeys the inequality (1) very well. However, the experimental results could also be explained by classical electrodynamics. In 1998, S. Dürr et al. used an atom interferometer controlled by atomic internal state to test the BCP in a quantum regime [19]. Although p ...
... a faint laser [18], and the result obeys the inequality (1) very well. However, the experimental results could also be explained by classical electrodynamics. In 1998, S. Dürr et al. used an atom interferometer controlled by atomic internal state to test the BCP in a quantum regime [19]. Although p ...
A critical analysis of the hydrino model
... that have been interpreted in support of a new model of the hydrogen atom [1, 2, 3, 4]. This model predicts the existence of new orbital states for the electron of the hydrogen atom with enhanced binding energy compared to the known hydrogen ground state. These new states have been named hydrinos. A ...
... that have been interpreted in support of a new model of the hydrogen atom [1, 2, 3, 4]. This model predicts the existence of new orbital states for the electron of the hydrogen atom with enhanced binding energy compared to the known hydrogen ground state. These new states have been named hydrinos. A ...
Introduction to Quantum Computation
... The circuit is not complicated, but it doesn’t provide an immediately intuitive picture of how the algorithm works. Are there any more intuitive models for quantum search? ...
... The circuit is not complicated, but it doesn’t provide an immediately intuitive picture of how the algorithm works. Are there any more intuitive models for quantum search? ...
5 Quantum Theory of Radiation
... This exercise is a continuation of Ex. 5.8. In that exercise you have constructed a “squeezed vacuum state” in which the fluctuations of the quadrature components Xk,λ or Yk,λ are less than in the vacuum state. The squeezed vacuum state was obtained by acting a “squeeze operator” Ŝ(ξ) on the vacuum ...
... This exercise is a continuation of Ex. 5.8. In that exercise you have constructed a “squeezed vacuum state” in which the fluctuations of the quadrature components Xk,λ or Yk,λ are less than in the vacuum state. The squeezed vacuum state was obtained by acting a “squeeze operator” Ŝ(ξ) on the vacuum ...
Topological Quantum Computing
... while not requiring each one be returned to its initial position. In 3+1 dimensions, denoting 3 spatial dimensions and a time dimension, the set of all homotopy classes of these world lines as described above has the group structure of Sn , the permutation group on n letters. We can see from the abo ...
... while not requiring each one be returned to its initial position. In 3+1 dimensions, denoting 3 spatial dimensions and a time dimension, the set of all homotopy classes of these world lines as described above has the group structure of Sn , the permutation group on n letters. We can see from the abo ...
Exact solutions and the adiabatic heuristic for quantum Hall states
... that some generalization of these methods will also help elucidate more general fractions. (The adiabatic heuristic may be used at a heuristic level to motivate either the hierarchical approach to other fractions, or some constructions using higher Landau levels, in a spirit similar to Jam’s [91.How ...
... that some generalization of these methods will also help elucidate more general fractions. (The adiabatic heuristic may be used at a heuristic level to motivate either the hierarchical approach to other fractions, or some constructions using higher Landau levels, in a spirit similar to Jam’s [91.How ...
part 1
... rotational state. The beating of interference patterns for molecules in different rotational states generates considerable structure as a function of field strength and permits the accurate determination of both polarizability components. Velocity Dependent Index of Refraction We were the first to i ...
... rotational state. The beating of interference patterns for molecules in different rotational states generates considerable structure as a function of field strength and permits the accurate determination of both polarizability components. Velocity Dependent Index of Refraction We were the first to i ...
Bohr–Einstein debates
The Bohr–Einstein debates were a series of public disputes about quantum mechanics between Albert Einstein and Niels Bohr. Their debates are remembered because of their importance to the philosophy of science. An account of the debates was written by Bohr in an article titled ""Discussions with Einsteinon Epistemological Problems in Atomic Physics"". Despite their differences of opinion regarding quantum mechanics, Bohr and Einstein had a mutual admiration that was to last the rest of their lives.The debates represent one of the highest points of scientific research in the first half of the twentieth century because it called attention to an element of quantum theory, quantum non-locality, which is absolutely central to our modern understanding of the physical world. The consensus view of professional physicists has been that Bohr proved victorious, and definitively established the fundamental probabilistic character of quantum measurement.