1,087 research outputs found

    High-order harmonic generation from Rydberg states at fixed Keldysh parameter

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    Because the commonly adopted viewpoint that the Keldysh parameter γ\gamma determines the dynamical regime in strong field physics has long been demonstrated to be misleading, one can ask what happens as relevant physical parameters, such as laser intensity and frequency, are varied while γ\gamma is kept fixed. We present results from our one- and fully three-dimensional quantum simulations of high-order harmonic generation (HHG) from various bound states of hydrogen with nn up to 40, where the laser intensities and the frequencies are scaled from those for n=1n=1 in order to maintain a fixed Keldysh parameter γ\gamma<1< 1 for all nn. We find that as we increase nn while keeping γ\gamma fixed, the position of the cut-off scales in well defined manner. Moreover, a secondary plateau forms with a new cut-off, splitting the HHG plateau into two regions. First of these sub-plateaus is composed of lower harmonics, and has a higher yield than the second one. The latter extends up to the semiclassical Ip+3.17UpI_p+3.17U_p cut-off. We find that this structure is universal, and the HHG spectra look the same for all n10n\gtrsim 10 when plotted as a function of the scaled harmonic order. We investigate the nn-, ll- and momentum distributions to elucidate the physical mechanism leading to this universal structure

    Phase-dependent interference fringes in the wavelength scaling of harmonic efficiency

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    We describe phase-dependent wavelength scaling of high-order harmonic generation efficiency driven by ultra-short laser fields in the mid-infrared. We employ both numerical solution of the time-dependent Schr\"{o}dinger equation and the Strong Field Approximation to analyze the fine-scale oscillations in the harmonic yield in the context of channel-closing effects. We show, by varying the carrier-envelope phase, that the amplitude of these oscillations depend strongly on the number of returning electron trajectories. Furthermore, the peak positions of the oscillations vary significantly as a function of the carrier-envelope phase. Owing to its practical applications, we also study the wavelength dependence of harmonic yield in the "single-cycle" limit, and observe a smooth variation in the wavelength scaling originating from the vanishing fine-scale oscillations.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure

    Dielectronic Recombination of Fe XV forming Fe XIV: Laboratory Measurements and Theoretical Calculations

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    We have measured resonance strengths and energies for dielectronic recombination (DR) of Mg-like Fe XV forming Al-like Fe XIV via N=3 -> N' = 3 core excitations in the electron-ion collision energy range 0-45 eV. All measurements were carried out using the heavy-ion Test Storage Ring at the Max Planck Institute for Nuclear Physics in Heidelberg, Germany. We have also carried out new multiconfiguration Breit-Pauli (MCBP) calculations using the AUTOSTRUCTURE code. For electron-ion collision energies < 25 eV we find poor agreement between our experimental and theoretical resonance energies and strengths. From 25 to 42 eV we find good agreement between the two for resonance energies. But in this energy range the theoretical resonance strengths are ~ 31% larger than the experimental results. This is larger than our estimated total experimental uncertainty in this energy range of +/- 26% (at a 90% confidence level). Above 42 eV the difference in the shape between the calculated and measured 3s3p(^1P_1)nl DR series limit we attribute partly to the nl dependence of the detection probabilities of high Rydberg states in the experiment. We have used our measurements, supplemented by our AUTOSTRUCTURE calculations, to produce a Maxwellian-averaged 3 -> 3 DR rate coefficient for Fe XV forming Fe XIV. The resulting rate coefficient is estimated to be accurate to better than +/- 29% (at a 90% confidence level) for k_BT_e > 1 eV. At temperatures of k_BT_e ~ 2.5-15 eV, where Fe XV is predicted to form in photoionized plasmas, significant discrepancies are found between our experimentally-derived rate coefficient and previously published theoretical results. Our new MCBP plasma rate coefficient is 19-28% smaller than our experimental results over this temperature range

    Correlation effects and orbital magnetism of Co clusters

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    Recent experiments on isolated Co clusters have shown huge orbital magnetic moments in comparison with their bulk and surface counterparts. These clusters hence provide the unique possibility to study the evolution of the orbital magnetic moment with respect to the cluster size and how competing interactions contribute to the quenching of orbital magnetism. We investigate here different theoretical methods to calculate the spin and orbital moments of Co clusters, and assess the performances of the methods in comparison with experiments. It is shown that density functional theory in conventional local density or generalized gradient approximations, or even with a hybrid functional, severely underestimates the orbital moment. As natural extensions/corrections we considered the orbital polarization correction, the LDA+U approximation as well as the LDA+DMFT method. Our theory shows that of the considered methods, only the LDA+DMFT method provides orbital moments in agreement with experiment, thus emphasizing the importance of dynamic correlations effects for determining fundamental magnetic properties of magnets in the nano-size regime

    Metal-based nanoparticles for combating antibiotic resistance

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    The resistance to antibiotics in combating bacteria is a serious worldwide problem. The search for new approaches to address antibacterial resistance is therefore of crucial importance and seeking alternatives for the treatment and control of bacterial diseases associated with resistant strains, which is in need of urgent action. There is an ongoing interest in metal-based nanoparticles (MBNPs) and their usage synergy with antibiotics due to their unique properties, such as overcoming bacterial resistance, reducing acute toxicity compared to their sizes, and allowing dosage reduction of active pharmaceutical ingredients. Combining MBNPs and antibiotics not only enhances the antibacterial effect but also allows the inhibition of biofilm production. Furthermore, MBNPs and antibiotics incorporated in polymeric biomaterial matrix have been widely studied to improve their efficiency and devoid the resistance. However, these studies need to be combined in a literature review. Polymeric biomaterials offer high mechanical stability with improved biocompatibility. Moreover, their use makes a single dose of administration of the final product with extended antibiotic half-life possible while slowly releasing their reservoir, which is an advantage in continuously combating resistance. This review focuses on different promising biomedical strategies for enhancing the bactericidal efficacy of antibiotics by the synergistic use of MBNPs, antibiotics, and polymeric biomaterials together to combat the resistance of different bacterial strains. In addition, it is prospected to guide opportunities for new research for future biomedical applications

    The effect of solvent and pressure on polycaprolactone solutions for particle and fibre formation

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    Polycaprolactone (PCL) is a widely used material in many applications to tackle health problems worldwide. Formed micro- or nanosized PCL particles and fibres benefit from a higher surface area to volume ratio and are valuable in those applications, thus there is always a push to achieve smaller diameters. Electrohydrodynamic (EHD) technologies have been at the forefront in the production of polymeric biomaterials, and pressurised gyration (PG) has also enhanced possibilities by its ability to spin comparable fibres at rapid speeds. In this work, PCL microparticles and fibres were separately produced by changing key operating parameters of EHD and PG systems and PCL solution properties. Initially, PCL microparticles were formed by electrospraying with different binary solvent systems, followed by pressurised gyration fibre production with various singular solvents and a pre-optimised binary solvent system. As anticipated, the use of binary systems altered particle morphologies and diameters, while increased pressure and the use of different solvents greatly affected the characteristics of resulting fibres. The morphology of PCL was found to be highly dependent on the solvents and operating parameters of the technology used

    Fixed point results for generalized cyclic contraction mappings in partial metric spaces

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    Rus (Approx. Convexity 3:171–178, 2005) introduced the concept of cyclic contraction mapping. P˘acurar and Rus (Nonlinear Anal. 72:1181–1187, 2010) proved some fixed point results for cyclic φ-contraction mappings on a metric space. Karapinar (Appl. Math. Lett. 24:822–825, 2011) obtained a unique fixed point of cyclic weak φ- contraction mappings and studied well-posedness problem for such mappings. On the other hand, Matthews (Ann. New York Acad. Sci. 728:183–197, 1994) introduced the concept of a partial metric as a part of the study of denotational semantics of dataflow networks. He gave a modified version of the Banach contraction principle, more suitable in this context. In this paper, we initiate the study of fixed points of generalized cyclic contraction in the framework of partial metric spaces. We also present some examples to validate our results.S. Romaguera acknowledges the support of the Ministry of Science and Innovation of Spain, grant MTM2009-12872-C02-01.Abbas, M.; Nazir, T.; Romaguera Bonilla, S. (2012). Fixed point results for generalized cyclic contraction mappings in partial metric spaces. Revista- Real Academia de Ciencias Exactas Fisicas Y Naturales Serie a Matematicas. 106(2):287-297. https://doi.org/10.1007/s13398-011-0051-5S2872971062Abdeljawad T., Karapinar E., Tas K.: Existence and uniqueness of a common fixed point on partial metric spaces. Appl. Math. Lett. 24(11), 1894–1899 (2011). doi: 10.1016/j.aml.2011.5.014Altun, I., Erduran A.: Fixed point theorems for monotone mappings on partial metric spaces. Fixed Point Theory Appl. article ID 508730 (2011). doi: 10.1155/2011/508730Altun I., Sadarangani K.: Corrigendum to “Generalized contractions on partial metric spaces” [Topology Appl. 157 (2010), 2778–2785]. Topol. 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Appl. 6, 33–40 (2011)Heckmann R.: Approximation of metric spaces by partial metric spaces. Appl. Cat. Struct. 7, 71–83 (1999)Karapinar E.: Fixed point theory for cyclic weak ϕ{\phi} -contraction. App. Math. Lett. 24, 822–825 (2011)Karapinar, E.: Generalizations of Caristi Kirk’s theorem on partial metric spaces. Fixed Point Theory Appl. 2011,4 (2011). doi: 10.1186/1687-1812-2011-4Karapinar E.: Weak φ{\varphi} -contraction on partial metric spaces and existence of fixed points in partially ordered sets. Math. Aeterna. 1(4), 237–244 (2011)Karapinar E., Erhan I.M.: Fixed point theorems for operators on partial metric spaces. Appl. Math. Lett. 24, 1894–1899 (2011)Karpagam S., Agrawal S.: Best proximity point theorems for cyclic orbital Meir–Keeler contraction maps. Nonlinear Anal. 74, 1040–1046 (2011)Kirk W.A., Srinavasan P.S., Veeramani P.: Fixed points for mapping satisfying cylical contractive conditions. 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(2010, article ID 493298, 6 pages).Romaguera, S.: Fixed point theorems for generalized contractions on partial metric spaces. Topol. Appl. (2011). doi: 10.1016/j.topol.2011.08.026Romaguera S., Valero O.: A quantitative computational model for complete partial metric spaces via formal balls. Math. Struct. Comput. Sci. 19, 541–563 (2009)Rus, I.A.: Cyclic representations and fixed points. Annals of the Tiberiu Popoviciu Seminar of Functional equations. Approx. Convexity 3, 171–178 (2005), ISSN 1584-4536Schellekens M.P.: The correspondence between partial metrics and semivaluations. Theoret. Comput. Sci. 315, 135–149 (2004)Valero O.: On Banach fixed point theorems for partial metric spaces. Appl. Gen. Top. 6, 229–240 (2005)Waszkiewicz P.: Quantitative continuous domains. Appl. Cat. Struct. 11, 41–67 (2003

    Kinetic Release Studies of Antibiotic Patches for Local Transdermal Delivery.

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    This study investigates the usage of electrohydrodynamic (EHD)-3D printing for the fabrication of bacterial cellulose (BC)/polycaprolactone (PCL) patches loaded with different antibiotics (amoxicillin (AMX), ampicillin (AMP), and kanamycin (KAN)) for transdermal delivery. The composite patches demonstrated facilitated drug loading and encapsulation efficiency of drugs along with extended drug release profiles. Release curves were also subjected to model fitting, and it was found that drug release was optimally adapted to the Higuchi square root model for each drug. They performed a time-dependent and diffusion-controlled release from the patches and followed Fick's diffusion law by the Korsmeyer-Peppas energy law equation. Moreover, produced patches demonstrated excellent antimicrobial activity against Gram-positive (Staphylococcus aureus) and Gram-negative (Escherichia coli) strains, so they could be helpful in the treatment of chronic infectious lesions during wound closures. As different tests have confirmed, various types of antibiotics could be loaded and successfully released regardless of their types from produced BC/PCL patches. This study could breathe life into the production of antibiotic patches for local transdermal applications in wound dressing studies and improve the quality of life of patients

    Boosting expensive synchronizing heuristics

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    For automata, synchronization, the problem of bringing an automaton to a particular state regardless of its initial state, is important. It has several applications in practice and is related to a fifty-year-old conjecture on the length of the shortest synchronizing word. Although using shorter words increases the effectiveness in practice, finding a shortest one (which is not necessarily unique) is NP-hard. For this reason, there exist various heuristics in the literature. However, high-quality heuristics such as SynchroP producing relatively shorter sequences are very expensive and can take hours when the automaton has tens of thousands of states. The SynchroP heuristic has been frequently used as a benchmark to evaluate the performance of the new heuristics. In this work, we first improve the runtime of SynchroP and its variants by using algorithmic techniques. We then focus on adapting SynchroP for many-core architectures, and overall, we obtain more than 1000× speedup on GPUs compared to naive sequential implementation that has been frequently used as a benchmark to evaluate new heuristics in the literature. We also propose two SynchroP variants and evaluate their performance
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