344 research outputs found
Brane superpotential and local Calabi-Yau manifolds
We briefly report on some recent progress in the computation of B-brane
superpotentials for Type II strings compactified on Calabi-Yau manifolds,
obtained by using a parametrization of tubular neighborhoods of complex
submanifolds, also known as local spaces. In particular, we propose a closed
expression for the superpotential of a brane on a genus-g curve in a Calabi-Yau
threefold in the case in which there exists a holomorphic projection from the
local space around the curve to the curve itself.Comment: 3 pages, contribution to the proceedings of the workshop "Progress of
String Theory and Quantum Field Theory", Osaka City University, December 200
Tailoring of phononic band structures in colloidal crystals
We report an experimental study of the elastic properties of a
two-dimensional (2D) colloidal crystal subjected to light-induced substrate
potentials. In agreement with recent theoretical predictions [H.H. von
Gruenberg and J. Baumgartl, Phys. Rev. E 75, 051406 (2007)] the phonon band
structure of such systems can be tuned depending on the symmetry and depth of
the substrate potential. Calculations with binary crystals suggest that
phononic band engineering can be also performed by variations of the pair
potential and thus opens novel perspectives for the fabrication of phononic
crystals with band gaps tunable by external fields.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, to appear in Physical Review Letter
Backgrounds in Boundary String Field Theory
We study the role of closed string backgrounds in boundary string field
theory. Background independence requires the introduction of dual boundary
fields, which are reminiscent of the doubled field formalism. We find a
correspondence between closed string backgrounds and collective excitations of
open strings described by vertex operators involving dual fields.
Renormalization group flow, solutions and stability are discussed in an
example.Comment: Contribution to proceedings of SFT09 in 'Theoretical and Mathematical
Physics', Russian Academy of Science
Impact of dispersion on pulse dynamics in chirped-pulse fiber lasers
Cataloged from PDF version of article.We report on a systematic study of an environmentally stable mode-locked Yb-doped fiber laser operating in the chirped-pulse regime. The linear cavity chirped-pulse fiber laser is constructed with a saturable absorber mirror as nonlinear mode-locking mechanism and a nonlinearity-free transmission-grating-based stretcher/compressor for dispersion management. Mode-locked operation and pulse dynamics from strong normal to strong anomalous total cavity dispersion in the range of +2.5 to -1.6 ps(2) is experimentally studied. Strongly positively chirped pulses from 4.3 ps (0.01 ps(2)) to 39 ps (2.5 ps(2)) are obtained at normal net-cavity dispersion. In the anomalous dispersion regime, the laser generates average soliton feature negatively chirped pulses with autocorrelation pulse durations from 0.8 ps (-0.07 ps(2)) to 3.9 ps (-1.6 ps(2)). The lowered peak power due to the pulse stretching allows one to increase the double pulse threshold. Based on the numerical simulation, different regimes of mode locking are obtained by varying the intra-cavity dispersion, and the characteristics of average soliton, stretched-pulse, wave-breaking-free and chirped-pulse regimes are discussed
Visualization of the birth of an optical vortex using diffraction from a triangular aperture
Funding: EPSRC, UKThe study and application of optical vortices have gained significant prominence over the last two decades. An interesting challenge remains the determination of the azimuthal index (topological charge) l of an optical vortex beam for a range of applications. We explore the diffraction of such beams from a triangular aperture and observe that the form of the resultant diffraction pattern is dependent upon both the magnitude and sign of the azimuthal index and this is valid for both monochromatic and broadband light fields. For the first time we demonstrate that this behavior is related not only to the azimuthal index but crucially the Gouy phase component of the incident beam. In particular, we explore the far field diffraction pattern for incident fields incident upon a triangular aperture possessing non-integer values of the azimuthal index l. Such fields have a complex vortex structure. We are able to infer the birth of a vortex which occurs at half-integer values of l and explore its evolution by observations of the diffraction pattern. These results demonstrate the extended versatility of a triangular aperture for the study of optical vortices. (c) 2011 Optical Society of AmericaPublisher PDFPeer reviewe
Moduli Webs and Superpotentials for Five-Branes
We investigate the one-parameter Calabi-Yau models and identify families of
D5-branes which are associated to lines embedded in these manifolds. The moduli
spaces are given by sets of Riemann curves, which form a web whose intersection
points are described by permutation branes. We arrive at a geometric
interpretation for bulk-boundary correlators as holomorphic differentials on
the moduli space and use this to compute effective open-closed superpotentials
to all orders in the open string couplings. The fixed points of D5-brane moduli
under bulk deformations are determined.Comment: 41 pages, 1 figur
Open-closed string correspondence: D-brane decay in curved space
This paper analyzes the effect of curved closed string backgrounds on the
stability of D-branes within boundary string field theory. We identify the
non-local open string background that implements shifts in the closed string
background and analyze the tachyonic sector off-shell. The renormalization
group flow reveals some characteristic properties, which are expected for a
curved background, like the absence of a stable space-filling brane. In
3-dimensions we describe tachyon condensation processes to lower-dimensional
branes, including a curved 2-dimensional brane. We argue that this 2-brane is
perturbatively stable. This is in agreement with the known maximally symmetric
WZW-branes and provides further support to the bulk-boundary factorization
approach to open-closed string correspondence.Comment: 23 pages, harvma
Sending femtosecond pulses in circles: highly non-paraxial accelerating beams
We use caustic beam shaping on 100 fs pulses to experimentally generate
non-paraxial accelerating beams along a 60 degree circular arc, moving
laterally by 14 \mum over a 28 \mum propagation length. This is the highest
degree of transverse acceleration reported to our knowledge. Using diffraction
integral theory and numerical beam propagation simulations, we show that
circular acceleration trajectories represent a unique class of non-paraxial
diffraction-free beam profile which also preserves the femtosecond temporal
structure in the vicinity of the caustic
Optical shield: measuring viscosity of turbid fluids using optical tweezers
The viscosity of a fluid can be measured by tracking the motion of a suspended micron-sized particle trapped by optical tweezers. However, when the particle density is high, additional particles entering the trap compromise the tracking procedure and degrade the accuracy of the measurement. In this work we introduce an additional Laguerre–Gaussian, i.e. annular, beam surrounding the trap, acting as an optical shield to exclude contaminating particles
D-brane superpotentials and RG flows on the quintic
The behaviour of D2-branes on the quintic under complex structure
deformations is analysed by combining Landau-Ginzburg techniques with methods
from conformal field theory. It is shown that the boundary renormalisation
group flow induced by the bulk deformations is realised as a gradient flow of
the effective space time superpotential which is calculated explicitly to all
orders in the boundary coupling constant.Comment: 24 pages, 1 figure, v2:Typo in (3.14) correcte
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