1,267 research outputs found

    Perturbation Theory for Plasmonic Modulation and Sensing

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    We develop a general perturbation theory to treat small parameter changes in dispersive plasmonic nanostructures and metamaterials. We specifically apply it to dielectric refractive index, and metallic plasma frequency modulation in metal- dielectric nanostructures. As a numerical demonstration, we verify the theory's accu- racy against direct calculations, for a system of plasmonic rods in air where the metal is defined by a two-pole fit of silver's dielectric function. We also discuss new optical behavior related to plasma frequency modulation in such systems. Our approach provides new physical insight for the design of plasmonic devices for biochemical sensing and optical modulation, and future active metamaterial applications.Comment: 17 pages, 6 figure

    B735: Ectomycorrhizae of Maine 1: A Listing of Boletaceae with the Associated Hosts

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    Forty-nine boletes have been collected and identified with their possible ectomycorrhizal associates for Maine. Most of the boletes are new reports for Maine. Acer negundo is a new host report for Boletinellus merulioides. Most of the ectomycorrhizal relationships reported here for Maine are confirmed by the work of others. Colored photos of thirty-seven Maine boletes are included.https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/aes_bulletin/1014/thumbnail.jp

    Acceptance of fluorescence detectors and its implication in energy spectrum inference at the highest energies

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    Along the years HiRes and AGASA experiments have explored the fluorescence and the ground array experimental techniques to measure extensive air showers, being both essential to investigate the ultra-high energy cosmic rays. However, such Collaborations have published contradictory energy spectra for energies above the GZK cut-off. In this article, we investigate the acceptance of fluorescence telescopes to different primary particles at the highest energies. Using CORSIKA and CONEX shower simulations without and with the new pre-showering scheme, which allows photons to interact in the Earth magnetic field, we estimate the aperture of the HiRes-I telescope for gammas, iron nuclei and protons primaries as a function of the number of simulated events and primary energy. We also investigate the possibility that systematic differences in shower development for hadrons and gammas could mask or distort vital features of the cosmic ray energy spectrum at energies above the photo-pion production threshold. The impact of these effects on the true acceptance of a fluorescence detector is analyzed in the context of top-down production models

    UAS Service Supplier Specification

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    Within the Unmanned Aircraft Systems (UAS) Traffic Management (UTM) system, the UAS Service Supplier (USS) is a key component. The USS serves several functions. At a high level, those include the following: Bridging communication between UAS Operators and Flight Information Management System (FIMS) Supporting planning of UAS operations Assisting strategic deconfliction of the UTM airspace Providing information support to UAS Operators during operations Helping UAS Operators meet their formal requirements This document provides the minimum set of requirements for a USS. In order to be recognized as a USS within UTM, successful demonstration of satisfying the requirements described herein will be a prerequisite. To ensure various desired qualities (security, fairness, availability, efficiency, maintainability, etc.), this specification relies on references to existing public specifications whenever possible

    18 Two years experience with CF newborn screening in University Hospital Brno

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    Real-time phase-shift detection of the surface plasmon resonance

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    We investigate a method to directly measure the phase of a laser beam reflected from a metallic film after excitation of surface plasmon polaritons. This method permits real time access to the phase information, it increases the possible speed of data acquisition, and it may thus prove useful for increasing the sensitivity of surface plasmon based sensors

    GZK photons as UHECR above 1019^{19} eV

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    "GZK photons" are produced by extragalactic nucleons through the resonant photoproduction of pions. We present the expected range of the GZK photon fraction of UHECR, assuming a particular UHECR spectrum and primary nucleons, and compare it with the minimal photon fraction predicted by Top-Down models.Comment: Talk given at TAUP2005, Sept. 10-14 2005, Zaragoza (Spain); 3 pages, 2 figure

    Effect of water-wall interaction potential on the properties of nanoconfined water

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    Much of the understanding of bulk liquids has progressed through study of the limiting case in which molecules interact via purely repulsive forces, such as a hard-core potential. In the same spirit, we report progress on the understanding of confined water by examining the behavior of water-like molecules interacting with planar walls via purely repulsive forces and compare our results with those obtained for Lennard-Jones (LJ) interactions between the molecules and the walls. Specifically, we perform molecular dynamics simulations of 512 water-like molecules which are confined between two smooth planar walls that are separated by 1.1 nm. At this separation, there are either two or three molecular layers of water, depending on density. We study two different forms of repulsive confinements, when the interaction potential between water-wall is (i) 1/r91/r^9 and (ii) WCA-like repulsive potential. We find that the thermodynamic, dynamic and structural properties of the liquid in purely repulsive confinements qualitatively match those for a system with a pure LJ attraction to the wall. In previous studies that include attractions, freezing into monolayer or trilayer ice was seen for this wall separation. Using the same separation as these previous studies, we find that the crystal state is not stable with 1/r91/r^9 repulsive walls but is stable with WCA-like repulsive confinement. However, by carefully adjusting the separation of the plates with 1/r91/r^9 repulsive interactions so that the effective space available to the molecules is the same as that for LJ confinement, we find that the same crystal phases are stable. This result emphasizes the importance of comparing systems only using the same effective confinement, which may differ from the geometric separation of the confining surfaces.Comment: 20 pages, 10 figure

    Surface plasmon resonance under conditions of electromagnetically induced transparency

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    A scheme for a surface plasmon resonance system under conditions of electromagnetically induced transparency (EIT) is proposed. The system is composed of three layers: a prism, a thin metal film, and a hybrid dielectric consisting of EIT atoms and a background substance. A probe and a coupling laser beam are input. Corresponding analytical formulas are derived for the cases when one or both of the laser beams excite surface plasmon polaritons at the metal/dielectric interface. Under resonance conditions, an extremely sharp dip appears in the reflectivity-frequency spectrum of the probe field, revealing new properties of two-dimensional EIT. The reflectivity is extremely sensitive to shifts in the laser frequencies and atomic levels, and to variations of permittivity of the substrate. This EIT-SPR system may to be used for novel magnetometers and biosensors

    Isotopic constraints on nitrogen transformation rates in the deep sedimentary marine biosphere

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    Author Posting. © American Geophysical Union,2018. This article is posted here by permission of American Geophysical Union for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Isotopic constraints on nitrogen transformation rates in the deep sedimentary marine biosphere. Global Biogeochemical Cycles, 32, (2018):1688–1702., doi: 10.1029/2018GB005948.Little is known about the nature of microbial community activity contributing to the cycling of nitrogen in organic-poor sediments underlying the expansive oligotrophic ocean gyres. Here we use pore water concentrations and stable N and O isotope measurements of nitrate and nitrite to constrain rates of nitrogen cycling processes over a 34-m profile from the deep North Atlantic spanning fully oxic to anoxic conditions. Using a 1-D reaction-diffusion model to predict the distribution of nitrogen cycling rates, results converge on two distinct scenarios: (1) an exceptionally high degree of coupling between nitrite oxidation and nitrate reduction near the top of the anoxic zone or (2) an unusually large N isotope effect (~60‰) for nitrate reduction that is decoupled from the corresponding O isotope effect, which is possibly explained by enzyme-level interconversion between nitrite and nitrate.Samples analyzed for this study were collected during the final expedition of the RV Knorr, KN223. The expedition would not have been possible without the captain and crew of the RV Knorr and the efforts of the shipboard science party. We would like to acknowledge Robert Pockalny for planning and facilitating the expedition. Inorganic geochemistry sample collection, processing, and analysis were performed shipboard by Arthur Spivack,Dennis Graham, Chloe Anderson, Emily Estes, Kira Homola, Claire McKinley, Theodore Present, and Justine Sauvage. Coring capabilities were provided by the Oregon State University and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute Coring Facilities, directed and funded by the U. S. National Science Foundation (NSF) Ship Facilities Program. The cored materials and discrete samples from the expedition are curated and stored by the Marine Geological Samples Laboratory at the University of Rhode Island, codirected by Rebecca Robinson and Katherine Kelly and funded by the NSF Ocean Sciences Division. The nutrient and isotope data from pore waters in this study will be available at The Biological and Chemical Data Management Office (https://www.bcodmo.org/project/567401). This project was partially funded by an NSF CDEBI postdoctoral fellowship to C. Buchwald. Portions of this material are based upon work supported while R. W. M. was serving at the National Science Foundation.2019-04-1
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