8,301 research outputs found
Controllable optical phase shift over one radian from a single isolated atom
Fundamental optics such as lenses and prisms work by applying phase shifts to
incoming light via the refractive index. In these macroscopic devices, many
particles each contribute a miniscule phase shift, working together to impose a
total phase shift of many radians. In principle, even a single isolated
particle can apply a radian-level phase shift, but observing this phenomenon
has proven challenging. We have used a single trapped atomic ion to induce and
measure a large optical phase shift of radians in light scattered
by the atom. Spatial interferometry between the scattered light and unscattered
illumination light enables us to isolate the phase shift in the scattered
component. The phase shift achieves the maximum value allowed by atomic theory
over the accessible range of laser frequencies, validating the microscopic
model that underpins the macroscopic phenomenon of the refractive index.
Single-atom phase shifts of this magnitude open up new quantum information
protocols, including long-range quantum phase-shift-keying cryptography [1,2]
and quantum nondemolition measurement [3,4].Comment: submitte
Periodicities In The X-Ray Intensity Variations of TV Columbae: An Intermediate Polar
We present results from a temporal analysis of the longest and the most
sensitive X-ray observations of TV Columbae--an intermediate polar. The
observations were carried out with the RXTE PCA, ROSAT PSPC, and ASCA. Data
were analyzed using a 1-dimensional CLEAN and Bayesian algorithms. The presence
of a nearly sinusoidal modulation due to the spin of the white dwarf is seen
clearly in all the data, confirming the previous reports based on the EXOSAT
data. An improved period of 1909.7+/-2.5s is derived for the spin from the RXTE
data.The binary period of 5.5hr is detected unambiguously in X-rays for the
first time. Several side-bands due to the interaction of these periods are
observed in the power spectra, thereby suggesting contributions from both the
disk-fed and the stream-fed accretion for TV Col. The accretion disk could
perhaps be precessing as side-bands due to the influence of 4 day period on the
orbital period are seen. The presence of a significant power at certain
side-bands of the spin frequency indicates that the emission poles are
asymmetrically located. The strong power at the orbital side-bands seen in both
the RXTE and ROSAT data gives an indication for an absorption site fixed in the
orbital frame. Both the spin and the binary modulation are found to be
energy-dependent. Increased hardness ratio during a broad dip in the intensity
at binary phase of 0.75--1.0 confirms the presence of a strong attenuation due
to additional absorbers probably from an impact site of the accretion stream
with the disk or magnetosphere. Hardness ratio variations and the energy
dependent modulation depth during the spin modulation can be explained by
partially covered absorbers in the path of X-ray emission region in the
accretion stream.Comment: 34 pages, including 12 figures, Accepted for publication in
Astronomical Journal, scheduled for January 2004 issue (vol. 127
The X-ray properties of the magnetic cataclysmic variable UUColumbae
Aims. XMM-Newton observations to determine for the first time the broad-band X-ray properties of the faint, high galactic latitude intermediate polar UUCol are presented.
Methods. We performed X-ray timing analysis in different energy ranges of the EPIC cameras, which reveals the dominance of the 863 s white dwarf rotational period. The spin pulse is strongly energy dependent. Weak variabilities at the beat 935 s and at the 3.5 h orbital periods are also observed, but the orbital modulation is detected only below 0.5 keV. Simultaneous UV and optical photometry shows that the spin pulse is anti-phased with respect to the hard X-rays. Analysis of the EPIC and RGS spectra reveals
the complexity of the X-ray emission, which is composed of a soft 50 eV black–body component and two optically thin emission components at 0.2 keV and 11 keV strongly absorbed by dense material with an equivalent hydrogen column density of 1023 cm−2 that partially (50%) covers the X-ray source.
Results. The complex X-ray and UV/optical temporal behaviour indicates that accretion occurs predominantly (∼80%) via a disc with a partial contribution (∼20%) directly from the stream. The main accreting pole dominates at high energies whilst the secondary pole mainly contributes in the soft X-rays and at lower energies. The bolometric flux ratio of the soft-to-hard X-ray emissions is found to be consistent with the prediction of the standard accretion shock model. We find the white dwarf in UUCol accretes at a low rate and possesses a low magnetic moment. It is therefore unlikely that UUCol will evolve into a moderate field strength polar, so that the soft X-ray intermediate polars still remain an enigmatic small group of magnetic cataclysmic variables
Measurement of focusing properties for high numerical aperture optics using an automated submicron beamprofiler
The focusing properties of three aspheric lenses with numerical aperture (NA)
between 0.53 and 0.68 were directly measured using an interferometrically
referenced scanning knife-edge beam profiler with sub-micron resolution. The
results obtained for two of the three lenses tested were in agreement with
paraxial gaussian beam theory. It was also found that the highest NA aspheric
lens which was designed for 830nm was not diffraction limited at 633nm. This
process was automated using motorized translation stages and provides a direct
method for testing the design specifications of high numerical aperture optics.Comment: 6 pages 4 figure
New observations of stratospheric N2O5
The unequivocal detection of N2O5 in the stratosphere was reported by Toon et al. based on measurements of the absorption by the N2O5 bands at 1246 and 1720/cm in solar occulation spectra recorded at sunrise near 47 S latitude by the Atmospheric Trace Molecule Spectroscopy (ATMOS) experiment during the Spacelab 3 (SL3) shuttle mission. Additional measurements and analysis of stratospheric N2O5 derived from the ATMOS/SL3 spectra are reported. The primary results are the detection and measurement of N2O5 absorption at sunset in the lower stratosphere, the inversion of a precise (approximately 10 percent) N2O5 sunrise vertical distribution between 25.5 and 37.5 km altitude, and the identification and measurement of absorption by the N2O5 743/cm band at sunrise. Assuming 4.32 x 10(sup -17) and 4.36 x 10(sup -17)/cm/molecule/sq cm respectively for the integrated intensities of the 1246 and 743/cm bands at stratospheric temperatures, retrieved volume mixing ratios in parts per billion by volume (ppbv) at sunrise (47 S latitude) are 1.32 + or - 0.34 at 37.5 km, 1.53 + or - 0.35 at 35.5 km, 1.63 + or - 0.36 at 33.5 km, 1.60 + or - 0.34 at 31.5 km, 1.43 + or - 0.30 at 29.5 km, 1.15 + or - 0.24 at 27.5 km, and 0.73 + or - 0.15 at 25.5 km. Retrieved VMRs in ppbv at sunset (30 N latitude) are 0.13 + or - 0.05 at 29.5 km, 0.14 + or - 0.05 at 27.5 km, and 0.10 + or - 0.04 at 25.5 km. Quoted error limits (1 sigma) include the error in the assumed band intensities (approximately 20 percent). Within the error limits of the measurements, the inferred mixing ratios at sunrise agree with diurnal photochemical model predictions obtained by two groups using current photochemical data. The measured mixing ratios at sunset are lower than the model predictions with differences of about a factor of 2 at 25 km altitude
Shall We Discard Our Plows?
One of the live topics of the day is whether the plow is ruining our land, whether farmers to save the soil for this and future generations must stop the age-old practice of plowing in preparing their land for cultivated crops. In this article the authors discuss the results of experiments conducted here in Iowa in which plowing is compared with other means of preparing seedbeds for corn. In general, we think many of you Iowa farmers who read the results of these tests will decide - if you haven\u27t already - that perhaps you are not quite ready to junk your plows
Energy Requirement of Control: Comments on Szilard's Engine and Maxwell's Demon
In mathematical physical analyses of Szilard's engine and Maxwell's demon, a
general assumption (explicit or implicit) is that one can neglect the energy
needed for relocating the piston in Szilard's engine and for driving the trap
door in Maxwell's demon. If this basic assumption is wrong, then the
conclusions of a vast literature on the implications of the Second Law of
Thermodynamics and of Landauer's erasure theorem are incorrect too. Our
analyses of the fundamental information physical aspects of various type of
control within Szilard's engine and Maxwell's demon indicate that the entropy
production due to the necessary generation of information yield much greater
energy dissipation than the energy Szilard's engine is able to produce even if
all sources of dissipation in the rest of these demons (due to measurement,
decision, memory, etc) are neglected.Comment: New, simpler and more fundamental approach utilizing the physical
meaning of control-information and the related entropy production. Criticism
of recent experiments adde
Absorption imaging of a single atom
Absorption imaging has played a key role in the advancement of science from
van Leeuwenhoek's discovery of red blood cells to modern observations of dust
clouds in stellar nebulas and Bose-Einstein condensates. Here we show the first
absorption imaging of a single atom isolated in vacuum. The optical properties
of atoms are thoroughly understood, so a single atom is an ideal system for
testing the limits of absorption imaging. A single atomic ion was confined in
an RF Paul trap and the absorption imaged at near wavelength resolution with a
phase Fresnel lens. The observed image contrast of 3.1(3)% is the maximum
theoretically allowed for the imaging resolution of our setup. The absorption
of photons by single atoms is of immediate interest for quantum information
processing (QIP). Our results also point out new opportunities in imaging of
light-sensitive samples both in the optical and x-ray regimes.Comment: Accepted to Nature Commu
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