Format results
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Talk
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Motives and Strings. (no audio)
PIRSA:04110015 -
Generalized Kahler geometry and T-duality (no audio)
Marco Gualtieri University of Toronto
PIRSA:04110016 -
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T-duality for holomorphic non-commutative tori
PIRSA:04110018 -
Affine structures, mirror symmetry, and K3 surfaces
PIRSA:04110019 -
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Talk
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About Semi-Classical Quantum Gravity
Alejandro Corichi National Autonomous University of Mexico
PIRSA:04100019 -
Physical Ramifications of Quantum Geometry
John Baez University of California, Riverside
PIRSA:04100020 -
The Problem of Dynamics in Quantum Gravity
John Baez University of California, Riverside
PIRSA:04100021 -
Is a past finite order the inner basis of space-time?
Rafael Sorkin Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics
PIRSA:04100022 -
Statistical Aspects of Semi-Classical Quantum Gravity
Luca Bombelli University of Mississippi
PIRSA:04100023 -
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Coarse Graining in Loop Quantization
Jose Zapata National Autonomous University of Mexico
PIRSA:04100025 -
CACTUS as a Collaborative Tool for Discrete Quantum Gravity
David Rideout University of California, San Diego
PIRSA:04100026
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Talk
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On the notion of Superselection Rule (SSR)
Domenico Giulini Leibniz University Hannover
PIRSA:04070000 -
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Quantizing and Dequantizing Reference Frames
Robert Spekkens Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics
PIRSA:04070002 -
Quantum Reference Frames and Uncertainty
PIRSA:04070003 -
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On Alignment of Chiralities of Distant Frameworks
PIRSA:04070007
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Thematic Program on The Geometry of String Theory 2004 - 2005: Mirror Symmetry
This meeting will be an international gathering of leading researchers to discuss the latest developments in our understanding of "mirror symmetry", a surprising relation that can exist between two Calabi-Yau manifolds. It happens that two such geometries may look very different, but are nevertheless equivalent when employed as hidden dimensions in string theory. Mirror symmetry has become a very powerful tool in both physics and mathematics. -
Workshop on Quantum Gravity in the Americas: Status and future directions - 2004
The goal of the workshop is to bring together Quantum Gravity researchers working in the Americas to share their approaches and results, draw connections between research efforts, develop a broader perspective on the issues, focus on outstanding problems, foster an interactive community, and set objectives for future research. This workshop is a following-up of the workshop organized in January in Mexico. -
Workshop on Reference Frames and Superselection Rules in Quantum Information Theory - 2004
Over the past five years, there has been much interest in a new kind of "unspeakable" quantum information which is to regular quantum information what a classical clock or gyroscope is to a classical message. While the latter is indifferent to the physical nature of the information carriers, the former requires the carrier to have a particular degree of freedom -- a spatial orientation in the case of a gyroscope, or a natural oscillation in the case of a clock. Systems serving this purpose are referred to generically as reference frames, and constitute a quantifiable resource in quantum information theory. They play a central role in the tasks of direction and frame alignment, phase estimation, clock synchronization, and global positioning. The community has only just begun a systematic study of how this resource can be manipulated, quantified, and used optimally in both information-processing protocols and physical parameter estimation.