1,452 research outputs found

    The Best in Every Way: A Clinical Diagnosis of Walter White

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    Frequency and time standards based on stored ions

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    The method of ion storage provides a basis for excellent time and frequency standards. This is due to the ability to confine ions for long periods of time without the usual perturbations associated with confinement (e.g., wall shifts). In addition, Doppler effects can be greatly suppressed. The use of stored ions for microwave frequency standards and the future possibilities for an optical frequency standard based on stored ions are addressed

    Support for Integrated Ecosystem Assessments of NOAA’s National Estuarine Research Reserves System (NERRS), Volume I: The Impacts of Coastal Development on the Ecology and Human Well-being of Tidal Creek Ecosystems of the US Southeast

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    A study was conducted, in association with the Sapelo Island and North Carolina National Estuarine Research Reserves (NERRs), to evaluate the impacts of coastal development on sentinel habitats (e.g., tidal creek ecosystems), including potential impacts to human health and well-being. Uplands associated with southeastern tidal creeks and the salt marshes they drain are popular locations for building homes, resorts, and recreational facilities because of the high quality of life and mild climate associated with these environments. Tidal creeks form part of the estuarine ecosystem characterized by high biological productivity, great ecological value, complex environmental gradients, and numerous interconnected processes. This research combined a watershed-level study integrating ecological, public health and human dimension attributes with watershed-level land use data. The approach used for this research was based upon a comparative watershed and ecosystem approach that sampled tidal creek networks draining developed watersheds (e.g., suburban, urban, and industrial) as well as undeveloped sites. The primary objective of this work was to clearly define the relationships between coastal development with its concomitant land use changes and non-point source pollution loading and the ecological and human health and well-being status of tidal creek ecosystems. Nineteen tidal creek systems, located along the southeastern United States coast from southern North Carolina to southern Georgia, were sampled during summer (June-August), 2005 and 2006. Within each system, creeks were divided into two primary segments based upon tidal zoning: intertidal (i.e., shallow, narrow headwater sections) and subtidal (i.e., deeper and wider sections), and watersheds were delineated for each segment. In total, we report findings on 24 intertidal and 19 subtidal creeks. Indicators sampled throughout each creek included water quality (e.g., dissolved oxygen concentration, salinity, nutrients, chlorophyll-a levels), sediment quality (e.g., characteristics, contaminants levels including emerging contaminants), pathogen and viral indicators, and abundance and genetic responses of biological resources (e.g., macrobenthic and nektonic communities, shellfish tissue contaminants, oyster microarray responses). For many indicators, the intertidally-dominated or headwater portions of tidal creeks were found to respond differently than the subtidally-dominated or larger and deeper portions of tidal creeks. Study results indicate that the integrity and productivity of headwater tidal creeks were impaired by land use changes and associated non-point source pollution, suggesting these habitats are valuable early warning sentinels of ensuing ecological impacts and potential public health threats. For these headwater creeks, this research has assisted the validation of a previously developed conceptual model for the southeastern US region. This conceptual model identified adverse changes that generally occurred in the physical and chemical environment (e.g., water quality indicators such as indicator bacteria for sewage pollution or sediment chemical contamination) when impervious cover levels in the watershed reach 10-20%. Ecological characteristics responded and were generally impaired when impervious cover levels exceed 20-30%. Estimates of impervious cover levels defining where human uses are impaired are currently being determined, but it appears that shellfish bed closures and the flooding vulnerability of headwater regions become a concern when impervious cover values exceed 10-30%. This information can be used to forecast the impacts of changing land use patterns on tidal creek environmental quality as well as associated human health and well-being. In addition, this study applied tools and technologies that are adaptable, transferable, and repeatable among the high quality NERRS sites as comparable reference entities to other nearby developed coastal watersheds. The findings herein will be of value in addressing local, regional and national needs for understanding multiple stressor (anthropogenic and human impacts) effects upon estuarine ecosystems and response trends in ecosystem condition with changing coastal impacts (i.e., development, climate change). (PDF contaions 88 pages

    Sub-dekahertz ultraviolet spectroscopy of 199Hg+

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    Using a laser that is frequency-locked to a Fabry-Perot etalon of high finesse and stability, we probe the 5d10 6s 2S_1/2 (F=0) - 5d9 6s 2D_5/2 (F=2) Delta-m_F = 0 electric-quadrupole transition of a single laser-cooled 199Hg+ ion stored in a cryogenic radio-frequency ion trap. We observe Fourier-transform limited linewidths as narrow as 6.7 Hz at 282 nm (1.06 X 10^15 Hz), yielding a line Q = 1.6 X 10^14. We perform a preliminary measurement of the 5d9 6s2 2D_5/2 electric-quadrupole shift due to interaction with the static fields of the trap, and discuss the implications for future trapped-ion optical frequency standards.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, submitted for publicatio

    Observation of the 1S0 - 3P0 clock transition in 27Al+

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    We report for the first time, laser spectroscopy of the 1S0 - 3P0 clock transition in 27Al+. A single aluminum ion and a single beryllium ion are simultaneously confined in a linear Paul trap, coupled by their mutual Coulomb repulsion. This coupling allows the beryllium ion to sympathetically cool the aluminum ion, and also enables transfer of the aluminum's electronic state to the beryllium's hyperfine state, which can be measured with high fidelity. These techniques are applied to a measurement of the clock transition frequency, \nu = 1 121 015 393 207 851(8) Hz. They are also used to measure the lifetime of the metastable clock state, \tau = 20.6 +/- 1.4 s, the ground state 1S0 g-factor, g_S = -0.00079248(14), and the excited state 3P0 g-factor, g_P = -0.00197686(21), in units of the Bohr magneton.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures; updated author lis

    Quantum state manipulation of trapped atomic ions

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    A single laser-cooled and trapped 9Be+ ion is used to investigate methods of coherent quantum-state synthesis and quantum logic. We create and characterize nonclassical states of motion including "Schroedinger-cat" states. A fundamental quantum logic gate is realized which uses two states of the quantized ion motion and two ion internal states as qubits. We explore some of the applications for, and problems in realizing, quantum computation based on multiple trapped ions.Comment: Postscript only. 21 pages text, 5 figures., Proc. Workshop on Quantum Computing, Santa Barbara, CA, Dec. 1996, Submitted to Proc. Roy. Soc.

    The Potential and Limitations of 2D Seismic Experiments for 3D Tomography

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    The Liguro-Provençal Basin is located in a complex tectonic area, at the junction of the Western Alps and Northern Apennines. Despite its central location within Europe, much about the basin, including the character of the crust, and the continuation of the Alpine orogen offshore, remain ambiguous. The basin began opening in the late Oligocene as a back-arc basin related to the retreat of the Apennine subduction zone. Opening continued into the early Miocene with the counter-clockwise rotation of the Corsica-Sardinia block to its current position. In the southern part of the basin where this rotation opened the widest, seismic tomography has shown evidence of oceanic crust, however, the extent of this spreading zone northward into the Ligurian Sea is poorly mapped. The nature of the crust in the basin, whether atypical oceanic crust or partially serpentinized mantle overlain by sediments or highly thinned continental crust is still a matter of debate. At a larger scale there are still open questions as to the continuation of the alpine orogen offshore, and the change in polarity between the Alp and Apennine subduction zones. As well, present day seismicity with thrust-faulting focal mechanisms have been observed in the basin, indicating that the stress field is now compressive. This could potentially reactivate rift-structures in the basin, which are difficult to map due to thick sediment cover including a layer of Messinian salt with variable thickness. These open questions, and the accessibility of the basin in the heart of Europe, have led to the collection of at least 18 active seismic profiles, and even more multi-channel seismic lines. Each of these studies have contributed to understanding the tectonics of the area through 2D tomography along the profile, but these are small snapshots of a complex setting. The amount of data that has been collected provides a unique opportunity to combine data sets and examine the possibility of gaining new information in the form of 3D tomography from existing 2D data sets. In this project we use active seismic data from the LOBSTER-AlpArray Experiment, the GROSMarin Experiment, and the SARDINIA Experiment, as well as passive seismic data from the AlpArray Experiment and the ISC Bulletin. We explore the potential and limitations of these data sets for use in 3D tomography using two new methods. We first use off-profile stations along a 2D seismic line combined with passive seismicity to provide back-shots for the stations, then in the Gulf of Lion we use two parallel seismic profiles where stations recorded shots from both profiles. This project is part of the DFG Priority Program “Mountain Building Processes in Four Dimensions (4DMB)”

    Symmetric qubits from cavity states

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    Two-mode cavities can be prepared in quantum states which represent symmetric multi-qubit states. However, the qubits are impossible to address individually and as such cannot be independently measured or otherwise manipulated. We propose two related schemes to coherently transfer the qubits which the cavity state represents onto individual atoms, so that the qubits can then be processed individually. In particular, our scheme can be combined with the quantum cloning scheme of Simon and coworkers [C. Simon et al, PRL 84, 2993 (2000)] to allow the optimal clones which their scheme produces to be spatially separated and individually utilized.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, minor typographical errors correcte

    Coherent optical phase transfer over a 32-km fiber with 1-s instability at 101710^{-17}

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    The phase coherence of an ultrastable optical frequency reference is fully maintained over actively stabilized fiber networks of lengths exceeding 30 km. For a 7-km link installed in an urban environment, the transfer instability is 6×10186 \times 10^{-18} at 1-s. The excess phase noise of 0.15 rad, integrated from 8 mHz to 25 MHz, yields a total timing jitter of 0.085 fs. A 32-km link achieves similar performance. Using frequency combs at each end of the coherent-transfer fiber link, a heterodyne beat between two independent ultrastable lasers, separated by 3.5 km and 163 THz, achieves a 1-Hz linewidth.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
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