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Specialist Periodical Reports provide systematic and critical
review coverage in major areas of chemical research. Compiled by
teams of leading authorities in the relevant subject, the series
creates a unique service for the active research chemist with
regular critical in-depth accounts of progress in particular areas
of chemistry. Subject coverage of all volumes is very similar and
publication is on an annual or biennial basis. There is an
increasing challenge for chemical industry and research
institutions to find cost-effective and environmentally sound
methods of converting natural resources into fuels, chemicals and
energy. Catalysts are essential to these processes and the
Catalysis Specialist Periodical Report series serves to highlight
major developments in this area. This series provides systematic
and detailed reviews of topics of interest to scientists and
engineers in the catalysis field. The coverage includes all major
areas of heterogeneous and homogeneous catalysis as well as
specific applications of catalysis such as NOx control, kinetics
and experimental techniques such as microcalorimetry. Each chapter
is compiled by recognised experts within their specialist fields,
and provides a summary of the current literature. This series will
be of interest to all those in academia and industry who need an
up-to-date critical analysis and summary of catalysis research and
applications. Volume 21 covers literature published during 2006.
This thesis reports on outstanding work in two main subfields of
quantum information science: one involves the quantum measurement
problem, and the other concerns quantum simulation. The thesis
proposes using a polarization-based displaced Sagnac-type
interferometer to achieve partial collapse measurement and its
reversal, and presents the first experimental verification of the
nonlocality of the partial collapse measurement and its reversal.
All of the experiments are carried out in the linear optical
system, one of the earliest experimental systems to employ quantum
communication and quantum information processing. The thesis argues
that quantum measurement can yield quantum entanglement recovery,
which is demonstrated by using the frequency freedom to simulate
the environment. Based on the weak measurement theory, the author
proposes that white light can be used to precisely estimate phase,
and effectively demonstrates that the imaginary part of the weak
value can be introduced by means of weak measurement evolution.
Lastly, a nine-order polarization-based displaced Sagnac-type
interferometer employing bulk optics is constructed to perform
quantum simulation of the Landau-Zener evolution, and by tuning the
system Hamiltonian, the first experiment to research the
Kibble-Zurek mechanism in non-equilibrium kinetics processes is
carried out in the linear optical system.
This thesis reports on outstanding work in two main subfields of
quantum information science: one involves the quantum measurement
problem, and the other concerns quantum simulation. The thesis
proposes using a polarization-based displaced Sagnac-type
interferometer to achieve partial collapse measurement and its
reversal, and presents the first experimental verification of the
nonlocality of the partial collapse measurement and its reversal.
All of the experiments are carried out in the linear optical
system, one of the earliest experimental systems to employ quantum
communication and quantum information processing. The thesis argues
that quantum measurement can yield quantum entanglement recovery,
which is demonstrated by using the frequency freedom to simulate
the environment. Based on the weak measurement theory, the author
proposes that white light can be used to precisely estimate phase,
and effectively demonstrates that the imaginary part of the weak
value can be introduced by means of weak measurement evolution.
Lastly, a nine-order polarization-based displaced Sagnac-type
interferometer employing bulk optics is constructed to perform
quantum simulation of the Landau-Zener evolution, and by tuning the
system Hamiltonian, the first experiment to research the
Kibble-Zurek mechanism in non-equilibrium kinetics processes is
carried out in the linear optical system.
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