
electron spin - Project PHYSNET
... The goal of our project is to assist a network of educators and scientists in transferring physics from one person to another. We support manuscript processing and distribution, along with communication and information systems. We also work with employers to identify basic scientific skills as well ...
... The goal of our project is to assist a network of educators and scientists in transferring physics from one person to another. We support manuscript processing and distribution, along with communication and information systems. We also work with employers to identify basic scientific skills as well ...
Weak antilocalization and spin relaxation in integrable quantum dots O Z
... even if the spin-precession length, i.e. the distance a particle travels in space during one period of precession of its spin vector, is of the order of the system size. In Eq. (2), s is the particle spin, and the phase-space functions without the hat denote the classical counterparts (Wigner–Weyl s ...
... even if the spin-precession length, i.e. the distance a particle travels in space during one period of precession of its spin vector, is of the order of the system size. In Eq. (2), s is the particle spin, and the phase-space functions without the hat denote the classical counterparts (Wigner–Weyl s ...
The Theory of Von Klitzing`s Constant and Phases
... This in principle makes the values of h/ie2 (i=integer). int"single electron" type theory is sufficient to obtain the value quite uncertain. The experimental uncertainty in the value of 25812.8 is only 0.2 but then in principle uncertainty is 2.810-3 which is a few parts per thousand. The plateau ...
... This in principle makes the values of h/ie2 (i=integer). int"single electron" type theory is sufficient to obtain the value quite uncertain. The experimental uncertainty in the value of 25812.8 is only 0.2 but then in principle uncertainty is 2.810-3 which is a few parts per thousand. The plateau ...
Phases of Matter and Phase Transitions
... and thus produce continuous phase transitions. In the years between 1937 and 1971, scientists recognized that the continuous phase transitions must be described not by average forces but by fluctuations away from the average. An entirely new approach, the renormalization group theory, was developed ...
... and thus produce continuous phase transitions. In the years between 1937 and 1971, scientists recognized that the continuous phase transitions must be described not by average forces but by fluctuations away from the average. An entirely new approach, the renormalization group theory, was developed ...
PDF
... were many such computers available, linking them together as a quantum network cannot be done with standard fiberoptic Internet infrastructure. The problem is the inscrutable, fragile nature of the qubit. An unknown qubit α|0i + β|1i cannot be measured perfectly, i.e., there is no measurement that c ...
... were many such computers available, linking them together as a quantum network cannot be done with standard fiberoptic Internet infrastructure. The problem is the inscrutable, fragile nature of the qubit. An unknown qubit α|0i + β|1i cannot be measured perfectly, i.e., there is no measurement that c ...
Complexity of one-dimensional spin chains
... locally checked (e.g., have m qubits instead of n): These states must violate a transition rule after at most O(m2) transitions, so have a (polynomially small) positive energy. • States which have the right structure and n qubits: The transition rules and boundary conditions select only a correct hi ...
... locally checked (e.g., have m qubits instead of n): These states must violate a transition rule after at most O(m2) transitions, so have a (polynomially small) positive energy. • States which have the right structure and n qubits: The transition rules and boundary conditions select only a correct hi ...
Learning station IX : Spin and its applications - Quantum Spin-Off
... You may complain about that. But just remember that you were happy enough to talk about the mass of an object without anyone ever telling you what it actually is. ...
... You may complain about that. But just remember that you were happy enough to talk about the mass of an object without anyone ever telling you what it actually is. ...
Abstracts - Texas Section AAPT
... a quantum particle (qp) in a dense Lennard-Jones 6-12 fluid having the thermodynamic properties of Xenon. Because of the difference in thermal wavelengths between the qp and the fluid molecules the fluid molecules can be treated classically. This combination of using quantum mechanics for the qp and ...
... a quantum particle (qp) in a dense Lennard-Jones 6-12 fluid having the thermodynamic properties of Xenon. Because of the difference in thermal wavelengths between the qp and the fluid molecules the fluid molecules can be treated classically. This combination of using quantum mechanics for the qp and ...
Making Stargates - Department of Physics
... effect at least – demand that the quantum vacuum be filled with anything at all. That is, quantum electrodynamics can be consistently interpreted as without any zero point vacuum fluctuations of the electromagnetic field at all. (The argument, however, does not include vacuum fluctuations of the ele ...
... effect at least – demand that the quantum vacuum be filled with anything at all. That is, quantum electrodynamics can be consistently interpreted as without any zero point vacuum fluctuations of the electromagnetic field at all. (The argument, however, does not include vacuum fluctuations of the ele ...
Commun. Math. Phys. 227, 605 (2002).
... strange given that the major focus of the field of quantum computation has, since 1995, been on fault tolerance. The point is that topology represents a potential alternative path toward computational stability. Topology can confer physical error correction where the traditional approach within qubi ...
... strange given that the major focus of the field of quantum computation has, since 1995, been on fault tolerance. The point is that topology represents a potential alternative path toward computational stability. Topology can confer physical error correction where the traditional approach within qubi ...
people.ysu.edu
... eigenvalue of the observable. You can have one Barium atom. Or one Yterbium atom. Your state can be an admixture of the two, but it is not real to find for a single measurement an atom that is some combination of the two. ...So if it was a mixed state of a Barium and Yterbium atom...and you measured ...
... eigenvalue of the observable. You can have one Barium atom. Or one Yterbium atom. Your state can be an admixture of the two, but it is not real to find for a single measurement an atom that is some combination of the two. ...So if it was a mixed state of a Barium and Yterbium atom...and you measured ...