301 research outputs found
Terahertz electron-hole recollisions in GaAs/AlGaAs quantum wells: robustness to scattering by optical phonons and thermal fluctuations
Electron-hole recollisions are induced by resonantly injecting excitons with
a near-IR laser at frequency into quantum wells driven by a
~10 kV/cm field oscillating at THz. At K, up to
18 sidebands are observed at frequencies , with . Electrons and holes recollide with
total kinetic energies up to 57 meV, well above the meV
threshold for longitudinal optical (LO) phonon emission. Sidebands with order
up to persist up to room temperature. A simple model shows that LO
phonon scattering suppresses but does not eliminate sidebands associated with
kinetic energies above .Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Optical frequency combs from high-order sideband generation
We report on the generation of frequency combs from the recently-discovered
phenomenon of high-order sideband generation (HSG). A near-band gap
continuous-wave (cw) laser with frequency was transmitted
through an epitaxial layer containing GaAs/AlGaAs quantum wells that were
driven by quasi-cw in-plane electric fields between 4 and 50
kV/cm oscillating at frequencies between 240 and 640 GHz.
Frequency combs with teeth at
( even) were produced, with maximum reported , corresponding to a
maximum comb span THz. Comb spectra with the identical product
were found to have similar spans and shapes
in most cases, as expected from the picture of HSG as a scattering-limited
electron-hole recollision phenomenon. The HSG combs were used to measure the
frequency and linewidth of our THz source as a demonstration of potential
applications
Dynamical birefringence: Electron-hole recollisions as probes of Berry curvature
The direct measurement of Berry phases is still a great challenge in
condensed matter systems. The bottleneck has been the ability to adiabatically
drive an electron coherently across a large portion of the Brillouin zone in a
solid where the scattering is strong and complicated. We break through this
bottleneck and show that high-order sideband generation (HSG) in semiconductors
is intimately affected by Berry phases. Electron-hole recollisions and HSG
occur when a near-band gap laser beam excites a semiconductor that is driven by
sufficiently strong terahertz (THz)-frequency electric fields. We carried out
experimental and theoretical studies of HSG from three GaAs/AlGaAs quantum
wells. The observed HSG spectra contain sidebands up to the 90th order, to our
knowledge the highest-order optical nonlinearity observed in solids. The
highest-order sidebands are associated with electron-hole pairs driven
coherently across roughly 10% of the Brillouin zone around the \Gamma point.
The principal experimental claim is a dynamical birefringence: the sidebands,
when the order is high enough (> 20), are usually stronger when the exciting
near-infrared (NIR) and the THz electric fields are polarized perpendicular
than parallel; the sideband intensities depend on the angles between the THz
field and the crystal axes in samples with sufficiently weak quenched disorder;
and the sidebands exhibit significant ellipticity that increases with
increasing sideband order, despite nearly linear excitation and driving fields.
We explain dynamical birefringence by generalizing the three-step model for
high order harmonic generation. The hole accumulates Berry phases due to
variation of its internal state as the quasi-momentum changes under the THz
field. Dynamical birefringence arises from quantum interference between
time-reversed pairs of electron-hole recollision pathways
The domestic and gendered context for retirement
Against a global backdrop of population and workforce ageing, successive UK governments have encouraged people to work longer and delay retirement. Debates focus mainly on factors affecting individuals’ decisions on when and how to retire. We argue that a fuller understanding of retirement can be achieved by recognizing the ways in which individuals’ expectations and behaviours reflect a complicated, dynamic set of interactions between domestic environments and gender roles, often established over a long time period, and more temporally proximate factors. Using a qualitative data set, we explore how the timing, nature and meaning of retirement and retirement planning are played out in specific domestic contexts. We conclude that future research and policies surrounding retirement need to: focus on the household, not the individual; consider retirement as an often messy and disrupted process and not a discrete event; and understand that retirement may mean very different things for women and for men
Human Immunodeficiency Virus-1 Uses the Mannose-6-Phosphate Receptor to Cross the Blood-Brain Barrier
HIV-1 circulates both as free virus and within immune cells, with the level of free virus being predictive of clinical course. Both forms of HIV-1 cross the blood-brain barrier (BBB) and much progress has been made in understanding the mechanisms by which infected immune cells cross the blood-brain barrier BBB. How HIV-1 as free virus crosses the BBB is less clear as brain endothelial cells are CD4 and galactosylceramide negative. Here, we found that HIV-1 can use the mannose-6 phosphate receptor (M6PR) to cross the BBB. Brain perfusion studies showed that HIV-1 crossed the BBB of all brain regions consistent with the uniform distribution of M6PR. Ultrastructural studies showed HIV-1 crossed by a transcytotic pathway consistent with transport by M6PR. An in vitro model of the BBB was used to show that transport of HIV-1 was inhibited by mannose, mannan, and mannose-6 phosphate and that enzymatic removal of high mannose oligosaccharide residues from HIV-1 reduced transport. Wheatgerm agglutinin and protamine sulfate, substances known to greatly increase transcytosis of HIV-1 across the BBB in vivo, were shown to be active in the in vitro model and to act through a mannose-dependent mechanism. Transport was also cAMP and calcium-dependent, the latter suggesting that the cation-dependent member of the M6PR family mediates HIV-1 transport across the BBB. We conclude that M6PR is an important receptor used by HIV-1 to cross the BBB
Home Production and Retirement in Couples: A Panel Data Analysis
We analyse the effects of retirement of one partner on home production by both partners in a couple. Using longitudinal data from Germany on couples, we control for fixed household specific effects to address the concern that retirement decisions are correlated with unobserved characteristics that also affect home production. For males and females, we find that own retirement significantly increases the amounts of home production. There are negative cross-effects of retirement on home production done by the partner. The fall in household income at retirement of one of the partners is largely compensated by an increase in total household production
Foreign Aid as a Signal to Investors: Predicting FDI in Post-conflict Countries
Does development aid attract foreign direct investment (FDI) in post-conflict countries? This article contributes to the growing literature on effects of aid and on determinants of FDI by explaining how development aid in low-information environments is a signal that can attract investment. Before investing abroad, firms seek data on potential host countries. In post-conflict countries, reliable information is poor, in part because governments face unusual incentives to misrepresent information. In these conditions, firms look to signals. One is development aid, because donors tend to give more to countries they trust to properly handle the funds. Our results show that aid seems to draw FDI—however, this is conditional on whether the aid can be considered geostrategically motivated. We also show that this effect decreases as time elapses after the conflict. This suggests that aid’s signaling effect is specific to low-information environments, and helps rule out alternative causal mechanisms linking aid and FDI
Endogenous Constitutions: Politics and Politicians Matter, Economic Outcomes Don’t
We study changes in the form of government as an example of endogenously determined constitutions. For a sample of 202 countries over the period 1950-2006, we find that most changes are relatively small and roughly equally likely to be either in the direction of more parliamentarian or more presidential systems. Based on a fixed effects ordered logit panel data model estimated over the period 1951-2000 for 146 countries, we find that such changes in the constitution can be explained by characteristics of the political system, internal and external political conflicts, and political leaders, whereas economic and socio-demographic variables do not matter
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