596 research outputs found
Dynamics of formation and decay of coherence in a polariton condensate
We study the dynamics of formation and decay of a condensate of microcavity
polaritons. We investigate the relationship between the number of particles,
the emission's linewidth and its degree of linear polarization which serves as
the order parameter. Tracking the condensate's formation, we show that, even
when interactions are negligible, coherence is not determined only by
occupation of the ground state. As a result of the competition between the
coherent and thermal fractions of the condensate, the highest coherence is
obtained some time after the particle number has reached its maximum
Electric-Field Tuning of Spin-Dependent Exciton-Exciton Interactions in Coupled Quantum Wells
We have shown experimentally that an electric field decreases the energy
separation between the two components of a dense spin-polarized exciton gas in
a coupled double quantum well, from a maximum splitting of meV to
zero, at a field of 35 kV/cm. This decrease, due to the field-induced
deformation of the exciton wavefunction, is explained by an existing
calculation of the change in the spin-dependent exciton-exciton interaction
with the electron-hole separation. However, a new theory that considers the
modification of screening with that separation is needed to account for the
observed dependence on excitation power of the individual energies of the two
exciton components.Comment: 5 pages, 4 eps figures, RevTeX, Physical Review Letters (in press
Interplay of the exciton and electron-hole plasma recombination on the photoluminescence dynamics in bulk GaAs
We present a systematic study of the exciton/electron-hole plasma
photoluminescence dynamics in bulk GaAs for various lattice temperatures and
excitation densities. The competition between the exciton and electron-hole
pair recombination dominates the onset of the luminescence. We show that the
metal-to-insulator transition, induced by temperature and/or excitation
density, can be directly monitored by the carrier dynamics and the
time-resolved spectral characteristics of the light emission. The dependence on
carrier density of the photoluminescence rise time is strongly modified around
a lattice temperature of 49 K, corresponding to the exciton binding energy (4.2
meV). In a similar way, the rise-time dependence on lattice temperature
undergoes a relatively abrupt change at an excitation density of 120-180x10^15
cm^-3, which is about five times greater than the calculated Mott density in
GaAs taking into account many body corrections.Comment: 15 pages, 7 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Observation of long-lived polariton states in semiconductor microcavities across the parametric threshold
The excitation spectrum around the pump-only stationary state of a polariton
optical parametric oscillator (OPO) in semiconductor microcavities is
investigated by time-resolved photoluminescence. The response to a weak pulsed
perturbation in the vicinity of the idler mode is directly related to the
lifetime of the elementary excitations. A dramatic increase of the lifetime is
observed for a pump intensity approaching and exceeding the OPO threshold. The
observations can be explained in terms of a critical slowing down of the
dynamics upon approaching the threshold and the following onset of the soft
Goldstone mode
Remote Estimation of Crop Health [ABSTRACT]
First sentence of abstract: In this paper we discuss developed techniques to remotely assess the fraction of photosynthetically active radiation absorbed by green vegetation [fAPAR-GREEN=fAPAR*(green LAI/total LAI)], fractional green vegetation cover (FGVC), green leaf area index (GLAI) green leaf biomass (GLB) and net ecosystem carbon dioxide exchange (NEE) in crops
Application of mesenchymal stem cells in bone regenerative procedures in oral implantology. A literature review
Objective: The aim of this work was to review de literature about the role of mesenchymal stem cells in bone regenerative
procedures in oral implantology, specifically, in the time require to promote bone regeneration.
Study Desing: A bibliographic search was carried out in PUBMED with a combination of different key words.
Animal and human studies that assessed histomorphometrically the influence of mesenchymal stem cells on bone
regeneration procedures in oral implantology surgeries were examined.
Reults:
- Alveolar regeneration: Different controlled histomorphometric animal studies showed that bone regeneration is
faster using stem cells seeded in scaffolds than using scaffolds or platelet rich plasma alone. Human studies revealed
that stem cells increase bone regeneration.
- Maxillary sinus lift: Controlled studies in animals and in humans showed higher bone regeneration applying stem
cells compared with controls.
- Periimplantary bone regeneration and alveolar distraction: Studies in animals showed higher regeneration when
stem cells are used. In humans, no evidence of applying mesenchymal stem cells in these regeneration procedures
was found.
Conclusion: Stem cells may promote bone regeneration and be useful in bone regenerative procedures in oral implantology,
but no firm conclusions can be drawn from the rather limited clinical studies so far performed
Expansion-Free Cavity Evolution: Some exact Analytical Models
We consider spherically symmetric distributions of anisotropic fluids with a
central vacuum cavity, evolving under the condition of vanishing expansion
scalar. Some analytical solutions are found satisfying Darmois junction
conditions on both delimiting boundary surfaces, while some others require the
presence of thin shells on either (or both) boundary surfaces. The solutions
here obtained model the evolution of the vacuum cavity and the surrounding
fluid distribution, emerging after a central explosion. This study complements
a previously published work where modeling of the evolution of such kind of
systems was achieved through a different kinematical condition.Comment: 9 pages, Revtex. Typos corrected. Published in Int. J. Mod. Phys.
Modelling and simulation of the sea-landing of aerial vehicles using the Particle Finite Element Method
In this paper the Particle Finite Element Method (PFEM) is applied to the simulation of the sea-landing of an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV). The problem of interest consists in modelling the impact of the vehicle against the water surface, analyzing the main kinematic and dynamic quantities (such as loads exerted upon the capsule at the moment of the impact). The PFEM, a methodology well-suited for free-surface flow simulation is used for modelling the water while a rigid body model is chosen for the vehicle. The vehicle under consideration is characterized by low weight. This leads to difficulties in modelling the fluid–structure interaction using standard Dirichlet–Neumann coupling. We apply a modified partitioned strategy introducing the interface Laplacian into the pressure Poisson's equation for obtaining a convergent FSI solution. The paper concludes with an industrial example of a vehicle sea-landing modelled using PFEM
Self-consistent model for ambipolar tunneling in quantum-well systems
We present a self-consistent approach to describe ambipolar tunneling in
asymmetrical double quantum wells under steady-state excitation and extend the
results to the case of tunneling from a near-surface quantum well to surface
states. The results of the model compare very well with the behavior observed
in photoluminescence experiments in asymmetric double quantum
wells and in near-surface single quantum wells.Comment: 10 pages, REVTeX 3.
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