11,962 research outputs found

    Microoptomechanical pumps assembled and driven by holographic optical vortex arrays

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    Beams of light with helical wavefronts can be focused into ring-like optical traps known as optical vortices. The orbital angular momentum carried by photons in helical modes can be transferred to trapped mesoscopic objects and thereby coupled to a surrounding fluid. We demonstrate that arrays of optical vortices created with the holographic optical tweezer technique can assemble colloidal spheres into dynamically reconfigurable microoptomechanical pumps assembled by optical gradient forces and actuated by photon orbital angular momentum.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, submitted to Optics Expres

    2-Chloro-5-nitro­pyridin-4-amine

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    The title mol­ecule, C5H4ClN3O2, possesses mirror symmetry, with all of the atoms lying in the mirror plane. There is an intra­molecular N—H⋯O hydrogen bond involving the adjacent –NO2 and –NH2 groups. A short C—H⋯O inter­action is also observed. In the crystal, adjacent mol­ecules are linked via N—H⋯Cl and N—H⋯N hydrogen bonds, forming chains propagating along [100]

    ARPES and NMTO Wannier Orbital Theory of LiMo6_{6}O17_{17} - Implications for Unusually Robust Quasi-One Dimensional Behavior

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    We present the results of a combined study by band theory and angle resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES) of the purple bronze, Li1−x_{1-x}Mo6_{6}O17_{17}. Structural and electronic origins of its unusually robust quasi-one dimensional (quasi-1D) behavior are investigated in detail. The band structure, in a large energy window around the Fermi energy, is basically 2D and formed by three Mo t2gt_{2g}-like extended Wannier orbitals, each one giving rise to a 1D band running at a 120∘^\circ angle to the two others. A structural "dimerization" from c/2\mathbf{c}/2 to c\mathbf{c} gaps the xzxz and yzyz bands while leaving the xyxy bands metallic in the gap, but resonantly coupled to the gap edges and, hence, to the other directions. The resulting complex shape of the quasi-1D Fermi surface (FS), verified by our ARPES, thus depends strongly on the Fermi energy position in the gap, implying a great sensitivity to Li stoichiometry of properties dependent on the FS, such as FS nesting or superconductivity. The strong resonances prevent either a two-band tight-binding model or a related real-space ladder picture from giving a valid description of the low-energy electronic structure. We use our extended knowledge of the electronic structure to newly advocate for framing LiMo6_{6}O17_{17} as a weak-coupling material and in that framework can rationalize both the robustness of its quasi-1D behavior and the rather large value of its Luttinger liquid (LL) exponent α\alpha. Down to a temperature of 6 \,K we find no evidence for a theoretically expected downward renormalization of perpendicular single particle hopping due to LL fluctuations in the quasi-1D chains.Comment: 53 pages, 17 Figures, 6 year

    Colloidal hydrodynamic coupling in concentric optical vortices

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    Optical vortex traps created from helical modes of light can drive fluid-borne colloidal particles in circular trajectories. Concentric circulating rings of particles formed by coaxial optical vortices form a microscopic Couette cell, in which the amount of hydrodynamic drag experienced by the spheres depends on the relative sense of the rings' circulation. Tracking the particles' motions makes possible measurements of the hydrodynamic coupling between the circular particle trains and addresses recently proposed hydrodynamic instabilities for collective colloidal motions on optical vortices.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figures, submitted to Europhysics Letter

    New Luttinger liquid physics from photoemission on Li0.9_{0.9}Mo6_6O17_{17}

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    Temperature dependent high resolution photoemission spectra of quasi-1 dimensional Li0.9_{0.9}Mo6_6O17_{17} evince a strong renormalization of its Luttinger liquid density-of-states anomalous exponent. We trace this new effect to interacting charge neutral critical modes that emerge naturally from the two-band nature of the material. Li0.9_{0.9}Mo6_6O17_{17} is shown thereby to be a paradigm material that is capable of revealing new Luttinger physics.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures. Accepted for publication by Phys. Rev. Let

    Photoemission Spectroscopy and the Unusually Robust One Dimensional Physics of Lithium Purple Bronze

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    Temperature dependent photoemission spectroscopy in Li0.9Mo6O17 contributes to evidence for one dimensional physics that is unusually robust. Three generic characteristics of the Luttinger liquid are observed, power law behavior of the k-integrated spectral function down to temperatures just above the superconducting transition, k-resolved lineshapes that show holon and spinon features, and quantum critical (QC) scaling in the lineshapes. Departures of the lineshapes and the scaling from expectations in the Tomonaga Luttinger model can be partially described by a phenomenological momentum broadening that is presented and discussed. The possibility that some form of 1d physics obtains even down to the superconducting transition temperature is assessed.Comment: submitted to JPCM, Special issue article "Physics in one dimension

    Chaotic dynamics of cold atoms in far-off-resonant donut beam

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    We describe the classical two dimensinal nonlinear dynamics of cold atoms in far-off-resonant donut beams. We show that there chaotic dynamics exists for charge greater than unity, when the intensity of the beam is periodically modulated. The two dimensional distributions of atoms in (x,y)(x,y) plane for charge two are simulated. We show that the atoms will acumulate on several ring regions when the system enters to regime of global chaos.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figure

    Holographic optical trapping

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    Holographic optical tweezers use computer-generated holograms to create arbitrary three-dimensional configurations of single-beam optical traps useful for capturing, moving and transforming mesoscopic objects. Through a combination of beam-splitting, mode forming, and adaptive wavefront correction, holographic traps can exert precisely specified and characterized forces and torques on objects ranging in size from a few nanometers to hundreds of micrometers. With nanometer-scale spatial resolution and real-time reconfigurability, holographic optical traps offer extraordinary access to the microscopic world and already have found applications in fundamental research and industrial applications.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures, invited contribution to Applied Optics focus issue on Digital Holograph
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