6,688 research outputs found
Control of coherent backscattering by breaking optical reciprocity
Reciprocity is a universal principle that has a profound impact on many areas
of physics. A fundamental phenomenon in condensed-matter physics, optical
physics and acoustics, arising from reciprocity, is the constructive
interference of quantum or classical waves which propagate along time-reversed
paths in disordered media, leading to, for example, weak localization and
metal-insulator transition. Previous studies have shown that such coherent
effects are suppressed when reciprocity is broken. Here we show that by
breaking reciprocity in a controlled manner, we can tune, rather than simply
suppress, these phenomena. In particular, we manipulate coherent backscattering
of light, also known as weak localization. By utilizing a non-reciprocal
magneto-optical effect, we control the interference between time-reversed paths
inside a multimode fiber with strong mode mixing, and realize a continuous
transition from the well-known peak to a dip in the backscattered intensity.
Our results may open new possibilities for coherent control of classical and
quantum waves in complex systemsComment: Comments are welcom
A Competitive Education: How Charter Schools Include and Exclude
A Competitive Education examines how the charter school movement is one of both inclusion and exclusion, while also serving as a study in rhetorical theory. Written as a senior thesis in the discipline of Writing and Rhetoric, this paper includes an introduction and reflection analyzing the text of the document from a rhetorical perspective. The article, written in a journalistic style, is presented in two ways: first, as one long article, and then as two shorter articles. The content of the articles looks at the history, politics, and real world effects of the charter school movement in California and across the United States
Critical States Embedded in the Continuum
We introduce a class of critical states which are embedded in the continuum
(CSC) of one-dimensional optical waveguide array with one non-Hermitian defect.
These states are at the verge of being fractal and have real propagation
constant. They emerge at a phase transition which is driven by the imaginary
refractive index of the defect waveguide and it is accompanied by a mode
segregation which reveals analogies with the Dicke super -radiance. Below this
point the states are extended while above they evolve to exponentially
localized modes. An addition of a background gain or loss can turn these
localized states to bound states in the continuum.Comment: 4.5 pages, 3 figures, 1 page of supplementary material including one
figur
The IBMAP approach for Markov networks structure learning
In this work we consider the problem of learning the structure of Markov
networks from data. We present an approach for tackling this problem called
IBMAP, together with an efficient instantiation of the approach: the IBMAP-HC
algorithm, designed for avoiding important limitations of existing
independence-based algorithms. These algorithms proceed by performing
statistical independence tests on data, trusting completely the outcome of each
test. In practice tests may be incorrect, resulting in potential cascading
errors and the consequent reduction in the quality of the structures learned.
IBMAP contemplates this uncertainty in the outcome of the tests through a
probabilistic maximum-a-posteriori approach. The approach is instantiated in
the IBMAP-HC algorithm, a structure selection strategy that performs a
polynomial heuristic local search in the space of possible structures. We
present an extensive empirical evaluation on synthetic and real data, showing
that our algorithm outperforms significantly the current independence-based
algorithms, in terms of data efficiency and quality of learned structures, with
equivalent computational complexities. We also show the performance of IBMAP-HC
in a real-world application of knowledge discovery: EDAs, which are
evolutionary algorithms that use structure learning on each generation for
modeling the distribution of populations. The experiments show that when
IBMAP-HC is used to learn the structure, EDAs improve the convergence to the
optimum
Collimation and Radiative Deceleration of Jets in TeV AGNs
We consider some implications of the rapid X-ray and TeV variability observed
in M87 and the TeV blazars. We outline a model for jet focusing and demonstrate
that modest radiative cooling can lead to recollimation of a relativistic jet
in a nozzle having a very small cross-sectional radius. Such a configuration
can produce rapid variability at large distances from the central engine and
may explain recent observations of the HST-1 knot in M87. Possible applications
of this model to TeV blazars are discussed. We also discuss a scenario for the
very rapid TeV flares observed with HESS and MAGIC in some blazars, that
accommodates the relatively small Doppler factors inferred from radio
observations.Comment: 5 pages. Proceedings of "High Energy Phenomena in Relativistic
Outflows", held in Dublin, Ireland, September 24-28, 200
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