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Dong Zhou

Researcher at Cornell University

Publications -  43
Citations -  1997

Dong Zhou is an academic researcher from Cornell University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Qubit & Quantitative susceptibility mapping. The author has an hindex of 22, co-authored 42 publications receiving 1707 citations. Previous affiliations of Dong Zhou include Nanjing University & University of Wisconsin-Madison.

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Background field removal by solving the Laplacian boundary value problem

TL;DR: The proposed Laplacian boundary value (LBV) method for background field removal retains data near the boundary and is computationally efficient and more accurate than two existing methods.
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Cavity-assisted quantum bath engineering.

TL;DR: By tailoring the spectrum of microwave photon shot noise in the cavity, this work creates a dissipative environment that autonomously relaxes the atom to an arbitrarily specified coherent superposition of the ground and excited states in the presence of background thermal excitations.
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A high-resolution chemical and structural study of framboidal pyrite formed within a low-temperature bacterial biofilm

TL;DR: Examination of the biofilm scraped from the inner surface of a borehole demonstrated that the framboids formed within a matrix of bacteria and biopolymers, confirming the association between framboidal pyrite and organic materials in low-temperature diagenetic environments and the important role of microenvironments in biofilms in regulating geochemical cycles.
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Two-particle quantum walks applied to the graph isomorphism problem

TL;DR: In this paper, the graph isomorphism problem was studied for strongly regular graphs, and it was shown that the quantum dynamics of interacting and noninteracting quantum particles are fundamentally different in the context of solving a particular computational problem.
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Gradual ordering in red abalone nacre.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present synchrotron spectromicroscopy experiments revealing that stacks of aragonite tablet crystals in nacre are misoriented with respect to each other.