Speed up of Volumetric Non-local Transform-Domain Filter

Author(s):  
P. Strakos ◽  
M. Jaros ◽  
T. Karasek
Keyword(s):  
Speed Up ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 16 (11&12) ◽  
pp. 954-968
Author(s):  
Dmitry Solenov

A quantum computing system is typically represented by a set of non-interacting (local) two-state systems—qubits. Many physical systems can naturally have more accessible states, both local and non-local. We show that the resulting non-local network of states connecting qubits can be efficiently addressed via continuous time quantum random walks, leading to substantial speed-up of multiqubit entanglement manipulations. We discuss a three-qubit Toffoli gate and a system of superconducting qubits as an illustration.


Author(s):  
Dr. Sheshang D. Degadwala ◽  
Arpana Mahajan ◽  
Dhairya Vyas ◽  
Shivam Upadhyay ◽  
Harsh S Dave

The technique of blending two images or more than two images which produces outcome as the composite fused image. The obtained fused image is the upgraded version of original images because it has all the salient information. The present applications makes majority usage of this fused image to speed up their processing tasks in their respective fields. Recent real-time applications which require image fusion are remote sensing applications, medical applications, surveillance application, photography applications etc. the broad categorization of image fusion techniques are Non-transform domain or spatial domain and Transform domain or frequency domain. This paper initiates with the introduction of image fusion. In the second section it explains the analysis of multi-focus techniques. The third section explains hybrid image fusion strategy. Further sections elaborates the taxonomy of image fusion techniques and their comparative analysis with results.


2001 ◽  
Vol 47 (156) ◽  
pp. 9-20 ◽  
Author(s):  
Douglas Mair ◽  
Peter Nienow ◽  
Ian Willis ◽  
Martin Sharp

AbstractThe surface motion of Haut Glacier d’Arolla, Switzerland, was monitored at a high spatial and temporal resolution. Data are analyzed to calculate surface velocities, surface strain rates and the components of the glacier force budget before, during and after an early melt season speed-up or “spring event”. We investigate the extent to which variations in glacier motion can be attributed to hydrologically induced local forcing or to non-local forcing transmitted via horizontal stress gradients. Enhanced glacier motion is dependent on a change in the spatial distribution of areas of high drag across the glacier.


2017 ◽  
Vol 77 (15) ◽  
pp. 20065-20086 ◽  
Author(s):  
Asem Khmag ◽  
Syed Abdul Rahman Al Haddad ◽  
Ridza Azri Ramlee ◽  
Noraziahtulhidayu Kamarudin ◽  
Fahad Layth Malallah

2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiao Yuan ◽  
Yunchao Liu ◽  
Qi Zhao ◽  
Bartosz Regula ◽  
Jayne Thompson ◽  
...  

AbstractQuantum memory—the capacity to faithfully preserve quantum coherence and correlations—is essential for quantum-enhanced technology. There is thus a pressing need for operationally meaningful means to benchmark candidate memories across diverse physical platforms. Here we introduce a universal benchmark distinguished by its relevance across multiple key operational settings, exactly quantifying (1) the memory’s robustness to noise, (2) the number of noiseless qubits needed for its synthesis, (3) its potential to speed up statistical sampling tasks, and (4) performance advantage in non-local games beyond classical limits. The measure is analytically computable for low-dimensional systems and can be efficiently bounded in the experiment without tomography. We thus illustrate quantum memory as a meaningful resource, with our benchmark reflecting both its cost of creation and what it can accomplish. We demonstrate the benchmark on the five-qubit IBM Q hardware, and apply it to witness the efficacy of error-suppression techniques and quantify non-Markovian noise. We thus present an experimentally accessible, practically meaningful, and universally relevant quantifier of a memory’s capability to preserve quantum advantage.


Entropy ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 23 (11) ◽  
pp. 1441
Author(s):  
Julien Zylberman ◽  
Fabrice Debbasch

Electric Dirac quantum walks, which are a discretisation of the Dirac equation for a spinor coupled to an electric field, are revisited in order to perform spatial searches. The Coulomb electric field of a point charge is used as a non local oracle to perform a spatial search on a 2D grid of N points. As other quantum walks proposed for spatial search, these walks localise partially on the charge after a finite period of time. However, contrary to other walks, this localisation time scales as N for small values of N and tends asymptotically to a constant for larger Ns, thus offering a speed-up over conventional methods.


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