
J. Foot - Atomic Physics
... physics and related disciplines. It has been driven by a perceived gap in the literature today. While basic undergraduate physics texts often show little or no connection with the huge explosion of research over the last two decades, more advanced and specialized texts tend to be rather daunting for ...
... physics and related disciplines. It has been driven by a perceived gap in the literature today. While basic undergraduate physics texts often show little or no connection with the huge explosion of research over the last two decades, more advanced and specialized texts tend to be rather daunting for ...
Quantum Memory in Atomic Ensembles - Oxford Physics
... Thanks to my Oxford massif, Andy Scott and Tom Rowlands-Rees, who know a good lunch when they see one. And in that vein, thanks to Matthijs Branderhorst, who along with Ben, introduced me to the burrito. There is a growing ultrafast diaspora — good people in far-off places — and of these I should li ...
... Thanks to my Oxford massif, Andy Scott and Tom Rowlands-Rees, who know a good lunch when they see one. And in that vein, thanks to Matthijs Branderhorst, who along with Ben, introduced me to the burrito. There is a growing ultrafast diaspora — good people in far-off places — and of these I should li ...
quantum transition-state theory. II. Recovery of the exact quantum
... We have relegated most of the scattering theory to Appendices A–D, in the hope that the outline of the derivation can be followed in the main body of the text. The article is structured as follows: After summarizing the main findings of Paper I1 in Sec. II, we introduce in Sec. III a hybrid flux-sid ...
... We have relegated most of the scattering theory to Appendices A–D, in the hope that the outline of the derivation can be followed in the main body of the text. The article is structured as follows: After summarizing the main findings of Paper I1 in Sec. II, we introduce in Sec. III a hybrid flux-sid ...
One Antimatter — Two Possible Thermodynamics
... running in different directions might still be possible, due to the (potential) existence of antimatter. Since Feynman’s theory of the positron [4], antiparticles are seen as particles moving backward in time. This gives us a hint that conventional thermodynamics, which is formulated for our world f ...
... running in different directions might still be possible, due to the (potential) existence of antimatter. Since Feynman’s theory of the positron [4], antiparticles are seen as particles moving backward in time. This gives us a hint that conventional thermodynamics, which is formulated for our world f ...
Wholeness and the Implicate Order
... only statistical predictions can be made about large aggregates of such particles. If on the other hand we apply the world view in which the universe is regarded as a continuous field, we find that this field must also be discontinuous, as well as particle-like, and that it is as undermined in its actu ...
... only statistical predictions can be made about large aggregates of such particles. If on the other hand we apply the world view in which the universe is regarded as a continuous field, we find that this field must also be discontinuous, as well as particle-like, and that it is as undermined in its actu ...
Spooky Action at Spacy Distances
... “Einstein, stop telling God what to do.” Niels Bohr It started as a physical debate over the completeness of quantum mechanics, but on a deeper level it was actually about one of the most fundamental questions in science: what does physical knowledge mean, and what can one objectively know about Nat ...
... “Einstein, stop telling God what to do.” Niels Bohr It started as a physical debate over the completeness of quantum mechanics, but on a deeper level it was actually about one of the most fundamental questions in science: what does physical knowledge mean, and what can one objectively know about Nat ...
How Many Query Superpositions Are Needed to Learn?
... In query learning two players, the learner and the teacher, play a game. The learner is a (classical) randomized algorithm and the teacher is an oracle function. Some concept class C (the target concept class) is known to both players and the teacher chooses a concept in C (the target concept) that ...
... In query learning two players, the learner and the teacher, play a game. The learner is a (classical) randomized algorithm and the teacher is an oracle function. Some concept class C (the target concept class) is known to both players and the teacher chooses a concept in C (the target concept) that ...
J. Phys. Chem. B 106, 8271, 2002
... Partial photodissociation cross sections are obtained according to the quantum formalism due to Balint-Kurti et. al.,56 where it is shown that the partial photodissociation cross sections σn(E;j) are obtained from the Fourier transform ...
... Partial photodissociation cross sections are obtained according to the quantum formalism due to Balint-Kurti et. al.,56 where it is shown that the partial photodissociation cross sections σn(E;j) are obtained from the Fourier transform ...
Valence Electron Ionization Dynamics of Chromium by a
... as shown in Figure 3 and Table 1. At an ionization wavelength of 370.78 nm, where the kinetic energy of photoelectron is as high as 0.95 eV, the J+ distribution is estimated to be approximately 26:18:6:4 for 6D9/2:6D7/2:6D5/2:6D3/2. This is at least qualitatively consistent with the statistical expe ...
... as shown in Figure 3 and Table 1. At an ionization wavelength of 370.78 nm, where the kinetic energy of photoelectron is as high as 0.95 eV, the J+ distribution is estimated to be approximately 26:18:6:4 for 6D9/2:6D7/2:6D5/2:6D3/2. This is at least qualitatively consistent with the statistical expe ...
Document
... “Who are you to tell God what to do?” Bohr “God not only plays dice, but sometimes throws them where they cannot be seen.” Modern answer by Hawking Powerpoint Templates ...
... “Who are you to tell God what to do?” Bohr “God not only plays dice, but sometimes throws them where they cannot be seen.” Modern answer by Hawking Powerpoint Templates ...
Paired states of fermions in two dimensions with breaking of parity
... between the weak and strong coupling regimes in two dimensions. In the weak-coupling regime, exotic phenomena are possible when parity and time reversal are broken. The results are applied to the fractional quantum Hall effect (FQHE) by using the composite fermion approach, to be reviewed below. We ...
... between the weak and strong coupling regimes in two dimensions. In the weak-coupling regime, exotic phenomena are possible when parity and time reversal are broken. The results are applied to the fractional quantum Hall effect (FQHE) by using the composite fermion approach, to be reviewed below. We ...
Title First Name Last
... formulations of the Dirac-Born-Infeld-Nambu-Goto D1 brane action with and without a dilation field under gauge-fixing”, Eur. Phys. J. C29, 453 (Europe). 20. U. Kulshreshtha and D. S. Kulshreshtha, 2003, “Conformally gauge-fixed Polyakov D1brane action in the presence of a 2-form gauge field: the ins ...
... formulations of the Dirac-Born-Infeld-Nambu-Goto D1 brane action with and without a dilation field under gauge-fixing”, Eur. Phys. J. C29, 453 (Europe). 20. U. Kulshreshtha and D. S. Kulshreshtha, 2003, “Conformally gauge-fixed Polyakov D1brane action in the presence of a 2-form gauge field: the ins ...
Toward a software architecture for quantum computing design tools
... Designing a quantum programming language is a difficult task since there is currently a limited repertoire of quantum algorithms. Moreover, at this point, we do not know whether a quantum computer will be a special-purpose ASIC or a general processor. However, we assume the communication between the ...
... Designing a quantum programming language is a difficult task since there is currently a limited repertoire of quantum algorithms. Moreover, at this point, we do not know whether a quantum computer will be a special-purpose ASIC or a general processor. However, we assume the communication between the ...
Contributions to the Quantum Optics of Multi
... a “temporary member” of their research groups, and for treating me like a fellow researcher, giving me all the tools needed to become productive under their watch. As a PhD student it is easier to hear the not–so–nice stories about ...
... a “temporary member” of their research groups, and for treating me like a fellow researcher, giving me all the tools needed to become productive under their watch. As a PhD student it is easier to hear the not–so–nice stories about ...
Quantum Copy-Protection and Quantum Money
... However, while the quantum money problem is fascinating by itself, it also motivates a broader problem: what sorts of “unclonable power” can be provided by a quantum state? So for example, given a Boolean funcn tion f : {0, 1} → {0, 1}, one can ask: does there exist a quantum state |ψf i that lets i ...
... However, while the quantum money problem is fascinating by itself, it also motivates a broader problem: what sorts of “unclonable power” can be provided by a quantum state? So for example, given a Boolean funcn tion f : {0, 1} → {0, 1}, one can ask: does there exist a quantum state |ψf i that lets i ...
Introduction to Quantum Information and Computation for Chemistry
... a measurement will collapse the state to either one of its component states |0 or |1, which is a widely observed phenomenon in quantum physics. Suppose we repetitively do the following: prepare a qubit in the same state α|0 + β|1 and then measure it with respect to the basis state {|0, |1}. Th ...
... a measurement will collapse the state to either one of its component states |0 or |1, which is a widely observed phenomenon in quantum physics. Suppose we repetitively do the following: prepare a qubit in the same state α|0 + β|1 and then measure it with respect to the basis state {|0, |1}. Th ...
conference on the foundations of quantum mechanics xavier
... physical significance. That was the way in which they presented it. But if you consider the fact that the observed phase shift in the wave function actually turns out to be proportional to the flux, which is gauge invariant, one might interpret the result of the experiment in a different way, namely ...
... physical significance. That was the way in which they presented it. But if you consider the fact that the observed phase shift in the wave function actually turns out to be proportional to the flux, which is gauge invariant, one might interpret the result of the experiment in a different way, namely ...
p15_11_6.pdf
... action along the trajectory[5–10]; in this way semiclassical methods can capture essential quantum phenomena such as interference, zero-point energy effects, and to some extent tunneling. We present some results from an approach that uses semiclassical electron dynamics to evaluate the correlation t ...
... action along the trajectory[5–10]; in this way semiclassical methods can capture essential quantum phenomena such as interference, zero-point energy effects, and to some extent tunneling. We present some results from an approach that uses semiclassical electron dynamics to evaluate the correlation t ...