387 research outputs found
Silver(I) triflate-catalyzed protocol for the post-ugi synthesis of spiroindolines
A silver(I) triflate-catalyzed protocol for the post-Ugi synthesis of tetracyclic spiroindolines has been developed. The protocol worked best for indole-3-carbaldehyde-derived Ugi adducts obtained using anilines and 3-aryl propiolic acids. Thus, it is complementary to the previous cationic gold-catalyzed procedure that was developed for analogues Ugi substrates derived from aliphatic amines and 3-alkyl propiolic acids. Furthermore, we have demonstrated that under our new settings this domino Friedel-Crafts ipso cyclization / imine trapping process could be efficiently combined with the preceding four-component Ugi reaction into a two-step one-pot transformation
U(1)-Symmetry breaking and violation of axial symmetry in TlCuCl3 and other insulating spin systems
We describe the Bose-Einstein condensate of magnetic bosonic quasiparticles
in insulating spin systems using a phenomenological standard functional method
for T = 0. We show that results that are already known from advanced
computational techniques immediately follow. The inclusion of a perturbative
anisotropy term that violates the axial symmetry allows us to remarkably well
explain a number of experimental features of the dimerized spin-1/2 system
TlCuCl3. Based on an energetic argument we predict a general intrinsic
instability of an axially symmetric magnetic condensate towards a violation of
this symmetry, which leads to the spontaneous formation of an anisotropy gap in
the energy spectrum above the critical field. We, therefore, expect that a true
Goldstone mode in insulating spin systems, i.e., a strictly linear
energy-dispersion relation down to arbitrarily small excitations energies,
cannot be observed in any real material.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure
Diversity-oriented synthesis of 1,3-benzodiazepines
© 2017 Elsevier Ltd A concise assembly of the 1,3-benzodiazepine core from A 3 -coupling-derived propargylamines and ortho-bromophenylisocyanates is described. The developed synthetic sequence involves the addition of propargylamine to isocyanate followed by palladium-catalyzed intramolecular alkyne hydroarylation that could be accomplished in a stepwise or one-pot manner.status: publishe
Why hyperbolic theories of dissipation cannot be ignored: Comments on a paper by Kostadt and Liu
Contrary to what is asserted in a recent paper by Kostadt and Liu ("Causality
and stability of the relativistic diffusion equation"), experiments can tell
apart (and in fact do) hyperbolic theories from parabolic theories of
dissipation. It is stressed that the existence of a non--negligible relaxation
time does not imply for the system to be out of the hydrodynamic regime.Comment: 8 pages Latex, to appear in Phys.Rev.
Quantum fluids of light
This article reviews recent theoretical and experimental advances in the
fundamental understanding and active control of quantum fluids of light in
nonlinear optical systems. In presence of effective photon-photon interactions
induced by the optical nonlinearity of the medium, a many-photon system can
behave collectively as a quantum fluid with a number of novel features stemming
from its intrinsically non-equilibrium nature. We present a rich variety of
photon hydrodynamical effects that have been recently observed, from the
superfluid flow around a defect at low speeds, to the appearance of a
Mach-Cherenkov cone in a supersonic flow, to the hydrodynamic formation of
topological excitations such as quantized vortices and dark solitons at the
surface of large impenetrable obstacles. While our review is mostly focused on
a class of semiconductor systems that have been extensively studied in recent
years (namely planar semiconductor microcavities in the strong light-matter
coupling regime having cavity polaritons as elementary excitations), the very
concept of quantum fluids of light applies to a broad spectrum of systems,
ranging from bulk nonlinear crystals, to atomic clouds embedded in optical
fibers and cavities, to photonic crystal cavities, to superconducting quantum
circuits based on Josephson junctions. The conclusive part of our article is
devoted to a review of the exciting perspectives to achieve strongly correlated
photon gases. In particular, we present different mechanisms to obtain
efficient photon blockade, we discuss the novel quantum phases that are
expected to appear in arrays of strongly nonlinear cavities, and we point out
the rich phenomenology offered by the implementation of artificial gauge fields
for photons.Comment: Accepted for publication on Rev. Mod. Phys. (in press, 2012
Experimentally measuring rolling and sliding in three-dimensional dense granular packings
We experimentally measure a three-dimensional (3D) granular system's
reversibility under cyclic compression. We image the grains using a
refractive-index-matched fluid, then analyze the images using the artificial
intelligence of variational autoencoders. These techniques allow us to track
all the grains' translations and 3D rotations with accuracy sufficient to infer
sliding and rolling displacements. Our observations reveal unique roles played
by 3D rotational motions in granular flows. We find that rotations and
contact-point motion dominate the dynamics in the bulk, far from the
perturbation's source. Furthermore, we determine that 3D rotations are
irreversible under cyclic compression. Consequently, contact-point sliding,
which is dissipative, accumulates throughout the cycle. Using numerical
simulations whose accuracy our experiment supports, we discover that much of
the dissipation occurs in the bulk, where grains rotate more than they
translate. Our observations suggest that the analysis of 3D rotations is needed
for understanding granular materials' unique and powerful ability to absorb and
dissipate energy
Atomic photoexcitation as a tool for probing purity of twisted light modes
The twisted light modes used in modern atomic physics experiments can be
contaminated by small admixtures of plane wave radiation. Although these
admixtures hardly reveal themselves in the beam intensity profile, they may
seriously affect the outcome of high precision spectroscopy measurements. In
the present study we propose a method for diagnosing such a plane wave
contamination, which is based on the analysis of the magnetic sublevel
population of atoms or ions interacting with the "twisted + plane wave"
radiation. In order to theoretically investigate the sublevel populations, we
solve the Liouville-von Neumann equation for the time evolution of atomic
density matrix. The proposed method is illustrated for the electric dipole transition in
Rb induced by (linearly, radially, or azimuthally polarized) vortex light with
just a small contamination. We find that even tiny admixtures of plane wave
radiation can lead to remarkable variations in the populations of the
ground-state magnetic sublevels. This opens up new opportunities for
diagnostics of twisted light in atomic spectroscopy experiments.Comment: 12 pages, 11 figure
- …
