7,843 research outputs found
First-passage theory of exciton population loss in single-walled carbon nanotubes reveals micron-scale intrinsic diffusion lengths
One-dimensional crystals have long range translational invariance which
manifests as long exciton diffusion lengths, but such intrinsic properties are
often obscured by environmental perturbations. We use a first-passage approach
to model single-walled carbon nanotube (SWCNT) exciton dynamics (including
exciton-exciton annihilation and end effects) and compare it to results from
both continuous-wave and multi-pulse ultrafast excitation experiments to
extract intrinsic SWCNT properties. Excitons in suspended SWCNTs experience
macroscopic diffusion lengths, on the order of the SWCNT length, (1.3-4.7 um)
in sharp contrast to encapsulated samples. For these pristine samples, our
model reveals intrinsic lifetimes (350-750 ps), diffusion constants (130-350
cm^2/s), and absorption cross-sections (2.1-3.6 X 10^-17 cm^2/atom) among the
highest previously reported.and diffusion lengths for SWCNTs.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure
Preparation and decay of a single quantum of vibration at ambient conditions
A single quantum of excitation of a mechanical oscillator is a textbook
example of the principles of quantum physics. Mechanical oscillators, despite
their pervasive presence in nature and modern technology, do not generically
exist in an excited Fock state. In the past few years, careful isolation of
GHz-frequency nano-scale oscillators has allowed experimenters to prepare such
states at milli-Kelvin temperatures. These developments illustrate the tension
between the basic predictions of quantum mechanics that should apply to all
mechanical oscillators existing even at ambient conditions, and the complex
experiments in extreme conditions required to observe those predictions. We
resolve the tension by creating a single Fock state of a vibration mode of a
crystal at room temperature using a technique that can be applied to any
Raman-active system. After exciting a bulk diamond with a femtosecond laser
pulse and detecting a Stokes-shifted photon, the 40~THz Raman-active internal
vibrational mode is prepared in the Fock state with probability.
The vibrational state is read out by a subsequent pulse, which when subjected
to a Hanbury-Brown-Twiss intensity correlation measurement reveals the
sub-Poisson number statistics of the vibrational mode. By controlling the delay
between the two pulses we are able to witness the decay of the vibrational Fock
state over its ps lifetime at room temperature. Our technique is agnostic
to specific selection rules, and should thus be applicable to any Raman-active
medium, opening a new generic approach to the experimental study of quantum
effects related to vibrational degrees of freedom in molecules and solid-state
systems
Temporally resolved second-order photon correlations of exciton-polariton Bose-Einstein condensate formation
Second-order time correlation measurements with a temporal resolution better
than 3 ps were performed on a CdTe microcavity where spontaneous Bose-Einstein
condensation is observed. After the laser pulse, the nonresonantly excited
thermal polariton population relaxes into a coherent polariton condensate.
Photon statistics of the light emitted by the microcavity evidences a clear
phase transition from the thermal state to a coherent state, which occurs
within 3.2 ps after the onset of stimulated scattering. Following this very
fast transition, we show that the emission possesses a very high coherence that
persists for more than 100 ps after the build-up of the condensate.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
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Spinal Progenitor-Laden Bridges Support Earlier Axon Regeneration Following Spinal Cord Injury.
Impact statementSpinal cord injury (SCI) results in loss of tissue innervation below the injury. Spinal progenitors have a greater ability to repair the damage and can be injected into the injury, but their regenerative potential is hampered by their poor survival after transplantation. Biomaterials can create a cell delivery platform and generate a more hospitable microenvironment for the progenitors within the injury. In this work, polymeric bridges are used to deliver embryonic spinal progenitors to the injury, resulting in increased progenitor survival and subsequent regeneration and functional recovery, thus demonstrating the importance of combined therapeutic approaches for SCI
Periodic squeezing in a polariton Josephson junction
The use of a Kerr nonlinearity to generate squeezed light is a well-known way
to surpass the quantum noise limit along a given field quadrature.
Nevertheless, in the most common regime of weak nonlinearity, a single Kerr
resonator is unable to provide the proper interrelation between the field
amplitude and squeezing required to induce a sizable deviation from Poissonian
statistics. We demonstrate experimentally that weakly coupled bosonic modes
allow exploration of the interplay between squeezing and displacement, which
can give rise to strong deviations from the Poissonian statistics. In
particular, we report on the periodic bunching in a Josephson junction formed
by two coupled exciton-polariton modes. Quantum modeling traces the bunching
back to the presence of quadrature squeezing. Our results, linking the light
statistics to squeezing, are a precursor to the study of nonclassical features
in semiconductor microcavities and other weakly nonlinear bosonic systems.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Parity (and time-reversal) anomaly in a semiconductor
The physics of a parity anomaly, potentially observable in a narrow-gap
semiconductor, is revisited. Fradkin, Dagotto, and Boyanovsky have suggested
that a Hall current of anomalous parity can be induced by a Peierls distortion
on a domain wall. I argue that a perturbation inducing the parity anomaly must
break the time reversal symmetry, which rules out the Peierls distortion as a
potential cause. I list all possible perturbations that can generate the
anomaly.Comment: 11 pages, 1 figure. Sign errors fixe
Anderson localisation in steady states of microcavity polaritons
We present an experimental signature of the Anderson localisation of
microcavity polaritons, and provide a systematic study of the dependence on
disorder strength. We reveal a controllable degree of localisation, as
characterised by the inverse-participation ratio, by tuning the positional
disorder of arrays of interacting mesas. This constitutes the realisation of
disorder-induced localisation in a driven-dissipative system. In addition to
being an ideal candidate for investigating localisation in this regime,
microcavity polaritons hold promise for low-power, ultra-small devices and
their localisation could be used as a resource in quantum memory and quantum
information processing.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figure
Quasiparticle-like peaks, kinks, and electron-phonon coupling at the (,0) regions in the CMR oxide LaSrMnO
Using Angle-Resolved Photoemission (ARPES), we present the first observation
of sharp quasiparticle-like peaks in a CMR manganite. We focus on the (,0)
regions of k-space and study their electronic scattering rates and dispersion
kinks, uncovering the critical energy scales, momentum scales, and strengths of
the interactions that renormalize the electrons. To identify these bosons we
measured phonon dispersions in the energy range of the kink by inelastic
neutron scattering (INS), finding a good match in both energy and momentum to
the oxygen bond-stretching phonons
The composition of heavy molecular ions inside the ionopause of Comet Halley
The RPA2-PICCA instrument aboard the Giotto spacecraft obtained 10-210 amu mass spectral of cold thermal molecular ions in the coma of Comet Halley. The dissociation products of the long chain formaldehyde polymer polyoxymethylene (POM) have recently been proposed as the dominant complex molecules in the coma of Comet Halley; however, POM alone cannot account for all of the features of the high resolution spectrum. An important component of the dust at Comet Halley is particles highly enriched in carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, and nitrogen relative to the composition of carbonaceous chondrites. Since this dust could be a source for the heavy molecules observed by PICCA, a search was conducted for other chemical species by determining all the molecules with mass between 20 and 120 amu which can be made from the relatively abundant C, H, O, and N, without regard to chemical structure
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