2,059 research outputs found
Novel color center platforms enabling fundamental scientific discovery
Color centers are versatile systems that generate quantum light, sense
magnetic fields and produce spin-photon entanglement. We review how these
properties have pushed the limits of fundamental knowledge in a variety of
scientific disciplines, from rejecting local-realistic theories to sensing
superconducting phase transitions. In the light of recent progress in material
processing and device fabrication, we identify new opportunities for
interdisciplinary fundamental discoveries in physics and geochemistry
The Boston University Photonics Center annual report 2015-2016
This repository item contains an annual report that summarizes activities of the Boston University Photonics Center in the 2015-2016 academic year. The report provides quantitative and descriptive information regarding photonics programs in education, interdisciplinary research, business innovation, and technology development. The Boston University Photonics Center (BUPC) is an interdisciplinary hub for education, research, scholarship, innovation, and technology development associated with practical uses of light.This has been a good year for the Photonics Center. In the following pages, you will see that this year the Center’s faculty received prodigious honors and awards, generated more than 100 notable scholarly publications in the leading journals in our field, and attracted $18.9M in new research grants/contracts. Faculty and staff also expanded their efforts in education and training, and cooperated in supporting National Science Foundation sponsored Sites for Research Experiences for Undergraduates and for Research Experiences for Teachers. As a community, we emphasized the theme of “Frontiers in Plasmonics as Enabling Science in Photonics and Beyond” at our annual symposium, hosted by Bjoern Reinhard. We continued to support the National Photonics Initiative, and contributed as a cooperating site in the American Institute for Manufacturing Integrated Photonics (AIM Photonics) which began this year as a new photonics-themed node in the National Network of Manufacturing Institutes. Highlights of our research achievements for the year include an ambitious new DoD-sponsored grant for Development of Less Toxic Treatment Strategies for Metastatic and Drug Resistant Breast Cancer Using Noninvasive Optical Monitoring led by Professor Darren Roblyer, continued support of our NIH-sponsored, Center for Innovation in Point of Care Technologies for the Future of Cancer Care led by Professor Cathy Klapperich, and an exciting confluence of new grant awards in the area of Neurophotonics led by Professors Christopher Gabel, Timothy Gardner, Xue Han, Jerome Mertz, Siddharth Ramachandran, Jason Ritt, and John White. Neurophotonics is fast becoming a leading area of strength of the Photonics Center. The Industry/University Collaborative Research Center, which has become the centerpiece of our translational biophotonics program, continues to focus onadvancing the health care and medical device industries, and has entered its sixth year of operation with a strong record of achievement and with the support of an enthusiastic industrial membership base
Fabrication of quantum emitters in aluminium nitride by Al-ion implantation and thermal annealing
Single-photon emitters (SPEs) within wide-bandgap materials represent an
appealing platform for the development of single-photon sources operating at
room temperatures. Group III- nitrides have previously been shown to host
efficient SPEs which are attributed to deep energy levels within the large
bandgap of the material, in a way that is similar to extensively investigated
colour centres in diamond. Anti-bunched emission from defect centres within
gallium nitride (GaN) and aluminium nitride (AlN) have been recently
demonstrated. While such emitters are particularly interesting due to the
compatibility of III-nitrides with cleanroom processes, the nature of such
defects and the optimal conditions for forming them are not fully understood.
Here, we investigate Al implantation on a commercial AlN epilayer through
subsequent steps of thermal annealing and confocal microscopy measurements. We
observe a fluence-dependent increase in the density of the emitters, resulting
in creation of ensembles at the maximum implantation fluence. Annealing at 600
{\deg}C results in the optimal yield in SPEs formation at the maximum fluence,
while a significant reduction in SPE density is observed at lower fluences.
These findings suggest that the mechanism of vacancy formation plays a key role
in the creation of the emitters, and open new perspectives in the defect
engineering of SPEs in solid state.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figure
Workshop on Advanced Technologies for Planetary Instruments, part 1
This meeting was conceived in response to new challenges facing NASA's robotic solar system exploration program. This volume contains papers presented at the Workshop on Advanced Technologies for Planetary Instruments on 28-30 Apr. 1993. This meeting was conceived in response to new challenges facing NASA's robotic solar system exploration program. Over the past several years, SDIO has sponsored a significant technology development program aimed, in part, at the production of instruments with these characteristics. This workshop provided an opportunity for specialists from the planetary science and DoD communities to establish contacts, to explore common technical ground in an open forum, and more specifically, to discuss the applicability of SDIO's technology base to planetary science instruments
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