Refine
Year of publication
Document Type
- Article (1578) (remove)
Keywords
- Einspielen <Werkstoff> (7)
- FEM (4)
- Finite-Elemente-Methode (4)
- LAPS (4)
- CellDrum (3)
- Label-free detection (3)
- biosensors (3)
- hydrogen peroxide (3)
- shakedown analysis (3)
- Bacillus atrophaeus (2)
- Bauingenieurwesen (2)
- CAD (2)
- Capacitive field-effect sensor (2)
- Einspielanalyse (2)
- Empirical process (2)
- Field-effect sensor (2)
- Goodness-of-fit test (2)
- Independence test (2)
- Light-addressable potentiometric sensor (2)
- Lipopolysaccharide (2)
Institute
- Fachbereich Medizintechnik und Technomathematik (1578) (remove)
Density Operator
(2009)
Operator
(2009)
Projection
(2009)
Self-Adjoint Operator
(2009)
Unitary Operator
(2009)
The concept of an injective affine embedding of the quantum states into a set of classical states, i.e., into the set of the probability measures on some measurable space, as well as its relation to statistically complete observables is revisited, and its limitation in view of a classical reformulation of the statistical scheme of quantum mechanics is discussed. In particular, on the basis of a theorem concerning a non-denseness property of a set of coexistent effects, it is shown that an injective classical embedding of the quantum states cannot be supplemented by an at least approximate classical description of the quantum mechanical effects. As an alternative approach, the concept of quasi-probability representations of quantum mechanics is considered.
The concept of an injective affine embedding of the quantum states into a set of classical states, i.e., into the set of the probability measures on some measurable space, as well as its relation to statistically complete observables is revisited, and its limitation in view of a classical reformulation of the statistical scheme of quantum mechanics is discussed. In particular, on the basis of a theorem concerning a non-denseness property of a set of coexistent effects, it is shown that an injective classical embedding of the quantum states cannot be supplemented by an at least approximate classical description of the quantum mechanical effects. As an alternative approach, the concept of quasi-probability representations of quantum mechanics is considered.
The readout of gamma detectors is considerably simplified when the event intensity is encoded as a pulse width (Pulse Width Modulation, PWM). Time-to-Digital-Converters (TDC) replace the conventional ADCs and multiple TDCs can be realized easily in one PLD chip (Programmable Logic Device). The output of a PWM stage is only one digital signal per channel which is well suited for transport so that further processing can be performed apart from the detector. This is particularly interesting for large systems with high channel density (e.g. high resolution scanners). In this work we present a circuit with a linear transfer function that requires a minimum of components by performing the PWM already in the preamp stage. This allows a very compact and also cost-efficient implementation of the front-end electronics.