1,127 research outputs found
Near- to mid-infrared picosecond optical parametric oscillator based on periodically poled RbTiOAsO4
We describe a Ti:sapphire-pumped picosecond optical parametric oscillator based on periodically poled RbTiOAsO4 that is broadly tunable in the near to mid infrared. A 4.5-mm single-grating crystal at room temperature in combination with pump wavelength tuning provided access to a continuous-tuning range from 3.35 to 5 mu m, and a pump power threshold of 90 mW was measured. Average mid-infrared output powers in excess of 100 mW and total output powers of 400 mW in similar to 1-ps pulses were obtained at 33% extraction efficiency. (C) 1998 Optical Society of America.</p
Free tensor multiplets and strings in spontaneously broken six-dimensional (2,0) theory
We first review the representations of the six-dimensional (2,0) superalgebra
on a free tensor multiplet and on a free string. We then construct a
supersymmetric Lagrangian describing a free tensor multiplet. (It also includes
a decoupled anti self-dual part of the three-form field strength.) This field
theory is then rewritten in variables appropriate for analyzing a situation
where the R-symmetry is spontaneously broken by the vacuum expectation values
of the scalar moduli fields. Finally, we construct a supersymmetric and
kappa-symmetric action for a free string.Comment: 15 pages, LaTe
Application of (S,S)-Pentacycloundecane bis(4-Phenyloxazoline) as a Novel Chiral Ligand for Catalysis of the Asymmetric Diels-Alder Reaction of Cyclopentadiene with 3-Acryloyl-2-oxazolidinone
The synthesis of the novel C1 symmetric (S,S)-pentacycloundecane bis(4-phenyloxazoline) ligand 5 and its evaluation as a chiral Lewis acid catalyst in the benchmark asymmetric Diels-Alder reaction between 3-acryloyloxazolidin-2-one (6) and cyclopentadiene (7) is reported. From the various metal salts screened the anhydrous magnesium perchlorate complex emerged as the best catalyst. The endo-cycloadduct product 8 was afforded in 81% enantiomeric excess with an endo:exo ratio of 98:2. An extensive screening of various metal ions as complexing agents was performed and is also reported.Keywords: Pentacycloundecane, oxazolines, chiral catalysis, Diels-Alder reactionPDF and Supplementry file attache
The enormous outer Galaxy HII region CTB 102
We present new radio recombination line observations of the previously
unstudied HII region CTB 102. Line parameters are extracted and physical
parameters describing the gas are calculated. We estimate the distance to CTB
102 to be 4.3 kpc. Through comparisons with HI and 1.42 GHz radio continuum
data, we estimate the size of CTB 102 to be 100-130 pc, making it one of the
largest HII regions known, comparable to the W4 complex. A stellar wind blown
bubble model is presented as the best explanation for the observed morphology,
size and velocities.Comment: 26 pages, 8 figures. Accepted for publication by The Astrophysical
Journa
Stereoselective synthesis towards unnatural proline-based amino acids
A catalytic diastereoselective Mannich reaction promoted by chiral bifunctional urea-type organocatalysts has been developed. Treatment of N-Boc-3-ketoproline with N-Boc-aldimines under mild conditions afforded the corresponding unnatural proline based amino acid derivatives with excellent diastereoselectivities (up to 99:1) and enantioselectivities (up to 97% ee). The relative configuration of the chiral reaction products was deduced by the comparsion of the experimentally observed ECD spectra to that obtained theorectically
Genuine Counterfactual Communication with a Nanophotonic Processor
In standard communication information is carried by particles or waves.
Counterintuitively, in counterfactual communication particles and information
can travel in opposite directions. The quantum Zeno effect allows Bob to
transmit a message to Alice by encoding information in particles he never
interacts with. The first suggested protocol not only required thousands of
ideal optical components, but also resulted in a so-called "weak trace" of the
particles having travelled from Bob to Alice, calling the scalability and
counterfactuality of previous proposals and experiments into question. Here we
overcome these challenges, implementing a new protocol in a programmable
nanophotonic processor, based on reconfigurable silicon-on-insulator waveguides
that operate at telecom wavelengths. This, together with our telecom
single-photon source and highly-efficient superconducting nanowire
single-photon detectors, provides a versatile and stable platform for a
high-fidelity implementation of genuinely trace-free counterfactual
communication, allowing us to actively tune the number of steps in the Zeno
measurement, and achieve a bit error probability below 1%, with neither
post-selection nor a weak trace. Our demonstration shows how our programmable
nanophotonic processor could be applied to more complex counterfactual tasks
and quantum information protocols.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Serotoninergic, peptidergic and GABAergic innervation of the ventrolateral and dorsolateral motor nuclei in the cat S1/S2 segments: An immunofluorescence study
Indirect single- and double-staining immunofluorescence techniques were used to study the serotoninergic, peptidergic and GABAergic innervation of the ventrolateral (Onuf's nucleus) and dorsolateral (innervating intrinsic foot sole muscles) nuclei, located in the S1/S2 segments of the cat spinal cord. The relative density of 5-hydroxytryptamine-, thyrotropin-releasing hormone-, substance P- and γ-aminobuytric acid-immunoreactive axonal varicosities was similar in both nuclei. The highest relative density was recorded for varicosities immunoreactive to γ-aminobutyric acid, while those immunoreactive to 5-hydroxytryptamine or thyrotropin-releasing hormone yielded the lowest values. The density of enkephalin-immunoreactive varicosities was higher in the ventrolateral than in the dorsolateral nucleus. Calcitonin gene-related peptide-like immunoreactivity could be seen in neurons of the ventrolateral and dorsolateral nuclei. Occasionally, calcitonin gene-related peptide-immunoreactive axonal fibers were also encountered in these nuclei. Virtually all thyrotropin-releasing hormone-immunoreactive varicosities in the ventrolateral and dorsolateral nuclei also contained 5-hydroxytryptamine-like immunoreactivity, while a somewhat smaller number of them were co-localized with substance P. About 5–10% of the 5-hydroxytryptamine-immunoreactive varicosities were devoid of peptide-like immunoreactivity, and the number of 5-hydroxytryptamine-immunoreactive varicosities lacking thyrotropin-releasing hormone-like immunoreactivity was higher in the dorsolateral than in the ventrolateral nucleus. Finally, the free fraction of substance P-immunoreactive varicosities, i.e., those lacking both 5-hydroxytryptamine and thyrotropin-releasing hormone, was about 39% in the ventrolateral and 26% in the dorsolateral nucleus. Spinal cord transection at the lower thoracic level induced a depletion of 5-hydroxytryptamine and thyrotropin-releasing hormone-immunoreactive fibers from the ventrolateral and dorsolateral nuclei, indicating an exclusive supraspinal origin for these fibers. A reduction in substance P-like immunoreactivity following spinal cord transection alone or spinal cord transection combined with unilateral dorsal rhizotomy was also detected in both nuclei, suggesting a dual origin for substance P-immunoreactive fibers, i.e., both supra- and intraspinal. The decrease in number of substance P-immunoreactive fibers was however smaller than expected from the analysis of the fraction of substance P-immunoreactive fibers co-localized with 5-hydroxytryptamine, indicating thus that the experimental lesions may have triggered a sprouting of substance P-immunoreactive axons originating from spinal cord sources. The distribution of γ-aminobutyric acid in the ventrolateral and dorsolateral nuclei was not affected by the different lesion paradigms. It is therefore assumed that these inputs are intrinsic to the spinal cord. Finally, both in the ventrolateral and the dorsolateral nucleus a small but statistically significant increase of axonal fibers immunoreactive to enkephalin was seen in response to the experimental lesions
Cerebrospinal fluid biomarkers of axonal and synaptic degeneration in a population-based sample
Background: Neurofilament light (NfL) and neurogranin (Ng) are promising candidate AD biomarkers, reflecting axonal and synaptic damage, respectively. Since there is a need to understand the synaptic and axonal damage in preclinical Alzheimer’s disease (AD), we aimed to determine the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) levels of NfL and Ng in cognitively unimpaired elderly from the Gothenburg H70 Birth Cohort Studies classified according to the amyloid/tau/neurodegeneration (A/T/N) system. Methods: The sample consisted of 258 cognitively unimpaired older adults (age 70, 129 women and 129 men) from the Gothenburg Birth Cohort Studies. We compared CSF NfL and Ng concentrations in A/T/N groups using Student’s T-test and ANCOVA. Results: CSF NfL concentration was higher in the A−T−N+ group (p=0.001) and the A−T+N+ group (p=0.006) compared with A−T−N−. CSF Ng concentration was higher in the A−T−N+, A−T+N+, A+T−N+, and A+T+N+ groups (p<0.0001) compared with A−T−N−. We found no difference in NfL or Ng concentration in A+ compared with A− (disregarding T− and N− status), whereas those with N+ had higher concentrations of NfL and Ng compared with N− (p<0.0001) (disregarding A− and T− status). Conclusions: CSF NfL and Ng concentrations are increased in cognitively normal older adults with biomarker evidence of tau pathology and neurodegeneration
Negative quasiprobabilities enhance phase estimation in quantum-optics experiment
Operator noncommutation, a hallmark of quantum theory, limits measurement
precision, according to uncertainty principles. Wielded correctly, though,
noncommutation can boost precision. A recent foundational result relates a
metrological advantage with negative quasiprobabilities -- quantum extensions
of probabilities -- engendered by noncommuting operators. We crystallize the
relationship in an equation that we prove theoretically and observe
experimentally. Our proof-of-principle optical experiment features a filtering
technique that we term partially postselected amplification (PPA). Using PPA,
we measure a waveplate's birefringent phase. PPA amplifies, by over two orders
of magnitude, the information obtained about the phase per detected photon. In
principle, PPA can boost the information obtained from the average filtered
photon by an arbitrarily large factor. The filter's amplification of systematic
errors, we find, bounds the theoretically unlimited advantage in practice. PPA
can facilitate any phase measurement and mitigates challenges that scale with
trial number, such as proportional noise and detector saturation. By
quantifying PPA's metrological advantage with quasiprobabilities, we reveal
deep connections between quantum foundations and precision measurement.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures in main text; 8 pages, 1 figure in appendice
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