Technical Roadmap for Fault-Tolerant Quantum Computing
... are described in this technical roadmap. Where possible, the authors have indicated the number of qubits needed for small quantum computer applications. It is our intention to provide an impartial and accurate presentation of the fault-tolerant quantum computing technology, its developments and the ...
... are described in this technical roadmap. Where possible, the authors have indicated the number of qubits needed for small quantum computer applications. It is our intention to provide an impartial and accurate presentation of the fault-tolerant quantum computing technology, its developments and the ...
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... executes a process which will select one of the possibilities as “true” or “extant”, and eliminates many of the others. Therefore, the steady auditory tone of uncertain intensity is perceived to have a level of about 50 dB – uncertainty resolved to the neighborhood of 50 dB (in the case of a continu ...
... executes a process which will select one of the possibilities as “true” or “extant”, and eliminates many of the others. Therefore, the steady auditory tone of uncertain intensity is perceived to have a level of about 50 dB – uncertainty resolved to the neighborhood of 50 dB (in the case of a continu ...
Performance of 1-mm Silicon Photomultiplier
... trench between the microcells and filling it with an optically opaque material. F. Afterpulsing Afterpulsing is the name given to Geiger pulses that occur after and are correlated to a random dark or photon initiated Geiger pulse. Afterpulsing occurs due to the release of carriers captured by traps ...
... trench between the microcells and filling it with an optically opaque material. F. Afterpulsing Afterpulsing is the name given to Geiger pulses that occur after and are correlated to a random dark or photon initiated Geiger pulse. Afterpulsing occurs due to the release of carriers captured by traps ...
View/Open
... where the summation over s runs over the S sites in the classical region, k is a multi-index, Ks is the truncation level of the multipole expansion, and Ms(k) is a component of a |k|th-order multipole moment located at site s. The superscript (k) notation is used to indicate order and Cartesian comp ...
... where the summation over s runs over the S sites in the classical region, k is a multi-index, Ks is the truncation level of the multipole expansion, and Ms(k) is a component of a |k|th-order multipole moment located at site s. The superscript (k) notation is used to indicate order and Cartesian comp ...
Reply to criticism of the ‘Orch OR qubit’ – ‘Orchestrated... reduction’ is scientifically justified
... As remarked upon above, to ask for too much precision in our suggested mechanisms is, at this stage, an unreasonable request. Nevertheless, we have clearly specified our proposal for an Orch OR qubit, as the Orch OR helical dipole pathway that Reimers et al. appear to ignore. Unlike previous proposa ...
... As remarked upon above, to ask for too much precision in our suggested mechanisms is, at this stage, an unreasonable request. Nevertheless, we have clearly specified our proposal for an Orch OR qubit, as the Orch OR helical dipole pathway that Reimers et al. appear to ignore. Unlike previous proposa ...
The Lorentz transformation
... are chosen appropriately. For example, one could work with seconds for time, and light-seconds for distance. (One light-second is equal to 299792458 metres). The only problem with this approach is that you must apply it consistently throughout. To identify the positions where c or a power of c appea ...
... are chosen appropriately. For example, one could work with seconds for time, and light-seconds for distance. (One light-second is equal to 299792458 metres). The only problem with this approach is that you must apply it consistently throughout. To identify the positions where c or a power of c appea ...
Towards a Quantum Programming Language
... or composite) statement operates by transforming a specific set of inputs to outputs. This is in contrast to imperative programming languages, which operate by updating global variables. Our language is also statically typed, which implies that the well-formedness of a program can be checked at comp ...
... or composite) statement operates by transforming a specific set of inputs to outputs. This is in contrast to imperative programming languages, which operate by updating global variables. Our language is also statically typed, which implies that the well-formedness of a program can be checked at comp ...
Antihydrogen Gravitational States Abstract - Institut Laue
... Galileo, Newton and Einstein recognized that all bodies, regardless of their mass and composition, fall towards the Earth with an equal gravitational acceleration. Is that conclusion valid for antimatter? This has never been tested. In the context of the general relativity theory, the universality o ...
... Galileo, Newton and Einstein recognized that all bodies, regardless of their mass and composition, fall towards the Earth with an equal gravitational acceleration. Is that conclusion valid for antimatter? This has never been tested. In the context of the general relativity theory, the universality o ...
Quantum Mechanics for Pedestrians 1: Fundamentals
... leeway, but also a definite need for a wide variety of presentations. Quantum Mechanics for Pedestrians has a thematic blend that distinguishes it from other introductions to quantum mechanics (at least those of which I am aware). It is not just about the conceptual and formal foundations of quantum ...
... leeway, but also a definite need for a wide variety of presentations. Quantum Mechanics for Pedestrians has a thematic blend that distinguishes it from other introductions to quantum mechanics (at least those of which I am aware). It is not just about the conceptual and formal foundations of quantum ...
Beyond Einstein and E =mc - The General Science Journal
... conservation of matter in chemical reactions i.e. matter can neither be created nor be destroyed but can be transformed from one form to other form [8]. Newton [7] has quoted in his book ‘Opticks’ in 1704 that "Gross bodies and light are convertible into one another...", No immediate reason is known ...
... conservation of matter in chemical reactions i.e. matter can neither be created nor be destroyed but can be transformed from one form to other form [8]. Newton [7] has quoted in his book ‘Opticks’ in 1704 that "Gross bodies and light are convertible into one another...", No immediate reason is known ...
Chapter 14.
... the coefficients is less than the threshold value, the circuit will output a one, otherwise the circuit produces a zero. The “Count Ones” function can be accomplished using a tree of half-adders and fulladders and is also known in the arithmetic design community as the 10:4 compressor. The quantum i ...
... the coefficients is less than the threshold value, the circuit will output a one, otherwise the circuit produces a zero. The “Count Ones” function can be accomplished using a tree of half-adders and fulladders and is also known in the arithmetic design community as the 10:4 compressor. The quantum i ...
Electronic transport properties of quasicrystals: a Review
... An algebraic description of Penrose tiling is due to De Brujin10 . If we consider a tiling of a N-dimensional space E a quasiperiodic tiling of a D-dimensional space Ek is described in a general method developed by M. Duneau and A. Katz11 . This method generalizes the example of figure figFCP, where ...
... An algebraic description of Penrose tiling is due to De Brujin10 . If we consider a tiling of a N-dimensional space E a quasiperiodic tiling of a D-dimensional space Ek is described in a general method developed by M. Duneau and A. Katz11 . This method generalizes the example of figure figFCP, where ...
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.