169 research outputs found
1.9”m operation of a Tm:Lead germanate glass waveguide laser
We report what we believe to be the first planar-technology waveguide laser in the 2-”m region. Laser operation of the 3H4 to 3H6 transition of Tm3+ ions in a lead germanate glass host has been observed in an ion-implanted planar waveguide
Three-dimensional stability of Burgers vortices
Burgers vortices are explicit stationary solutions of the Navier-Stokes
equations which are often used to describe the vortex tubes observed in
numerical simulations of three-dimensional turbulence. In this model, the
velocity field is a two-dimensional perturbation of a linear straining flow
with axial symmetry. The only free parameter is the Reynolds number , where is the total circulation of the vortex and is
the kinematic viscosity. The purpose of this paper is to show that Burgers
vortex is asymptotically stable with respect to general three-dimensional
perturbations, for all values of the Reynolds number. This definitive result
subsumes earlier studies by various authors, which were either restricted to
small Reynolds numbers or to two-dimensional perturbations. Our proof relies on
the crucial observation that the linearized operator at Burgers vortex has a
simple and very specific dependence upon the axial variable. This allows to
reduce the full linearized equations to a vectorial two-dimensional problem,
which can be treated using an extension of the techniques developped in earlier
works. Although Burgers vortices are found to be stable for all Reynolds
numbers, the proof indicates that perturbations may undergo an important
transient amplification if is large, a phenomenon that was indeed observed
in numerical simulations.Comment: 31 pages, no figur
Be Stars: Rapidly Rotating Pulsators
I will show that Be stars are, without exception, a class of rapidly rotating
stars, which are in the majority of cases pulsating stars as well, while none
of them does possess a large scale (i.e. with significant dipolar contribution)
magnetic field.Comment: Review talk given at "XX Stellar Pulsation Conference Series: Impact
of new instrumentation and new insights in stellar pulsations", Granada, 5-9
September 2011, in press in AIP Conf. Se
Equivalence between supersymmetric self-dual and Maxwell-Chern-Simons models coupled to a matter spinor superfield
We study the duality of the supersymmetric self-dual and Maxwell-Chern-Simons
theories coupled to a fermionic matter superfield, using a master action. This
approach evades the difficulties inherent to the quartic couplings that appear
when matter is represented by a scalar superfield. The price is that the
spinorial matter superfield represents a unusual supersymmetric multiplet,
whose main physical properties we also discuss.Comment: v2, 16 pages, elsarticle.cls, accepted for publication in PL
Ion-implanted Nd:MgO:LiNbO<sub>3</sub> planar waveguide laser
Laser oscillation in an ion-implanted planar Nd:MgO:LiNbO3 waveguide is demonstrated for the first time to our knowledge. Details of the waveguide structure, spectroscopic properties, photorefractive effects. and laser performance are given. A simple calculation of the absorbed power threshold gives ~8mW, in fair agreement with the experimental value of ~17mW
A 1.9”m thulium doped lead germanate waveguide laser
Tm3+ doped lead germanate glass has already been shown to be a promising source of 1.9”m radiation using the 3H4 to 3H6 transition in a fibre geometry. The maximum vibrational energy of these glasses lies between that of silica and heavy metal fluoride glasses. This increases the radiative lifetime of the upper laser level in comparison to silicates while increasing the multiphonon non-radiative decay from the 3F4 pumping level into the upper laser level in comparison to fluorides. Thus the 1.9”m Tm3+ laser performance is enhanced in these glasses bringing fibre laser thresholds easily within reach of diode pumping. Recent work has also shown that such glasses give very low propagation loss guides (0.15 dB/cm) when implanted with He ions. Here we report lasing in a planar ion-implanted waveguide in Tm-doped lead germanate. This is the first report of lasing for thulium in any planar waveguide system and this is also the longest wavelength so far reported for such systems. This is also the first report of lasing in a glass host using ion-implantation as the means of waveguide fabrication
Operation of ytterbium-doped silica fibre lasers at specific wavelengths using fibre gratings
Yb-doped fibre lasers have been previously reported as versatile, efficient laser sources in the 1 ”spectral region. The very broad Stark splitting of Yb energy levels in silica results in wide pump (830 - 1064 nm) and emission (975 - 1160 nm) bands. The emission band includes a number of wavelengths of interest for specific uses; examples include 1020 nm, the optimum pump wavelength for the Pr:ZBLAN amplifier and upconversion laser, and 1128 nm. which has been utilised to pump a Tm:ZBLAN upconversion laser
De Sitter Holography and the Cosmic Microwave Background
We interpret cosmological evolution holographically as a renormalisation
group flow in a dual Euclidean field theory, as suggested by the conjectured
dS/CFT correspondence. Inflation is described by perturbing around the
infra-red fixed point of the dual field theory. The spectrum of the cosmic
microwave background radiation is determined in terms of scaling violations in
the field theory. The dark energy allows similar, albeit less predictive,
considerations. We discuss the cosmological fine-tuning problems from the
holographic perspective.Comment: 17 pages, 2 figures, uses JHEP style files; corrected and added
reference
A Step Beyond the Bounce: Bubble Dynamics in Quantum Phase Transitions
We study the dynamical evolution of a phase interface or bubble in the
context of a \lambda \phi^4 + g \phi^6 scalar quantum field theory. We use a
self-consistent mean-field approximation derived from a 2PI effective action to
construct an initial value problem for the expectation value of the quantum
field and two-point function. We solve the equations of motion numerically in
(1+1)-dimensions and compare the results to the purely classical evolution. We
find that the quantum fluctuations dress the classical profile, affecting both
the early time expansion of the bubble and the behavior upon collision with a
neighboring interface.Comment: 12 pages, multiple figure
A standardisation framework for bioâlogging data to advance ecological research and conservation
Bioâlogging data obtained by tagging animals are key to addressing global conservation challenges. However, the many thousands of existing bioâlogging datasets are not easily discoverable, universally comparable, nor readily accessible through existing repositories and across platforms, slowing down ecological research and effective management. A set of universal standards is needed to ensure discoverability, interoperability and effective translation of bioâlogging data into research and management recommendations.
We propose a standardisation framework adhering to existing data principles (FAIR: Findable, Accessible, Interoperable and Reusable; and TRUST: Transparency, Responsibility, User focus, Sustainability and Technology) and involving the use of simple templates to create a data flow from manufacturers and researchers to compliant repositories, where automated procedures should be in place to prepare data availability into four standardised levels: (a) decoded raw data, (b) curated data, (c) interpolated data and (d) gridded data. Our framework allows for integration of simple tabular arrays (e.g. csv files) and creation of sharable and interoperable network Common Data Form (netCDF) files containing all the needed information for accuracyâofâuse, rightful attribution (ensuring data providers keep ownership through the entire process) and data preservation security.
We show the standardisation benefits for all stakeholders involved, and illustrate the application of our framework by focusing on marine animals and by providing examples of the workflow across all data levels, including filled templates and code to process data between levels, as well as templates to prepare netCDF files ready for sharing.
Adoption of our framework will facilitate collection of Essential Ocean Variables (EOVs) in support of the Global Ocean Observing System (GOOS) and interâgovernmental assessments (e.g. the World Ocean Assessment), and will provide a starting point for broader efforts to establish interoperable bioâlogging data formats across all fields in animal ecology
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