464 research outputs found
Band-Limited Coronagraphs using a halftone-dot process: II. Advances and laboratory results for arbitrary telescope apertures
The band-limited coronagraph is a nearly ideal concept that theoretically
enables perfect cancellation of all the light of an on-axis source. Over the
past years, several prototypes have been developed and tested in the
laboratory, and more emphasis is now on developing optimal technologies that
can efficiently deliver the expected high-contrast levels of such a concept.
Following the development of an early near-IR demonstrator, we present and
discuss the results of a second-generation prototype using halftone-dot
technology. We report improvement in the accuracy of the control of the local
transmission of the manufactured prototype, which was measured to be less than
1%.
This advanced H-band band-limited device demonstrated excellent contrast
levels in the laboratory, down to 10-6 at farther angular separations than 3
lambda/D over 24% spectral bandwidth. These performances outperform the ones of
our former prototype by more than an order of magnitude and confirm the
maturity of the manufacturing process.
Current and next generation high-contrast instruments can directly benefit
from such capabilities. In this context, we experimentally examine the ability
of the band-limited coronagraph to withstand various complex telescope
apertures.Comment: Accepted in ApJ - under pres
Line Emission from an Accretion Disk around a Black hole: Effects of Disk Structure
The observed iron K-alpha fluorescence lines in Seyfert-1 galaxies provide
strong evidence for an accretion disk near a supermassive black hole as a
source of the line emission. These lines serve as powerful probes for examining
the structure of inner regions of accretion disks. Previous studies of line
emission have considered geometrically thin disks only, where the gas moves
along geodesics in the equatorial plane of a black hole. Here we extend this
work to consider effects on line profiles from finite disk thickness, radial
accretion flow and turbulence. We adopt the Novikov and Thorne (1973) solution,
and find that within this framework, turbulent broadening is the dominant new
effect. The most prominent change in the skewed, double-horned line profiles is
a substantial reduction in the maximum flux at both red and blue peaks. The
effect is most pronounced when the inclination angle is large, and when the
accretion rate is high. Thus, the effects discussed here may be important for
future detailed modeling of high quality observational data.Comment: 21 pages including 8 figures; LaTeX; ApJ format; accepted by ApJ;
short results of this paper appeared before as a conference proceedings
(astro-ph/9711214
Characterization and Compensation of the Residual Chirp in a Mach-Zehnder-Type Electro-Optical Intensity Modulator
We utilize various techniques to characterize the residual phase modulation
of a fiber-based Mach-Zehnder electro-optical intensity modulator. A heterodyne
technique is used to directly measure the phase change due to a given change in
intensity, thereby determining the chirp parameter of the device. This chirp
parameter is also measured by examining the ratio of sidebands for sinusoidal
amplitude modulation. Finally, the frequency chirp caused by an intensity pulse
on the nanosecond time scale is measured via the heterodyne signal. We show
that this chirp can be largely compensated with a separate phase modulator. The
various measurements of the chirp parameter are in reasonable agreement.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figure
Characteristic QSO Accretion Disk Temperatures from Spectroscopic Continuum Variability
Using Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) quasar spectra taken at multiple
epochs, we find that the composite flux density differences in the rest frame
wavelength range 1300-6000 AA can be fit by a standard thermal accretion disk
model where the accretion rate has changed from one epoch to the next (without
considering additional continuum emission components). The fit to the composite
residual has two free parameters: a normalizing constant and the average
characteristic temperature . In turn the characteristic temperature
is dependent on the ratio of the mass accretion rate to the square of the black
hole mass. We therefore conclude that most of the UV/optical variability may be
due to processes involving the disk, and thus that a significant fraction of
the UV/optical spectrum may come directly from the disk.Comment: 31 pages, 8 figure
Prospects for precision measurements of atomic helium using direct frequency comb spectroscopy
We analyze several possibilities for precisely measuring electronic
transitions in atomic helium by the direct use of phase-stabilized femtosecond
frequency combs. Because the comb is self-calibrating and can be shifted into
the ultraviolet spectral region via harmonic generation, it offers the prospect
of greatly improved accuracy for UV and far-UV transitions. To take advantage
of this accuracy an ultracold helium sample is needed. For measurements of the
triplet spectrum a magneto-optical trap (MOT) can be used to cool and trap
metastable 2^3S state atoms. We analyze schemes for measuring the two-photon
interval, and for resonant two-photon excitation to high
Rydberg states, . We also analyze experiments on the
singlet-state spectrum. To accomplish this we propose schemes for producing and
trapping ultracold helium in the 1^1S or 2^1S state via intercombination
transitions. A particularly intriguing scenario is the possibility of measuring
the transition with extremely high accuracy by use of
two-photon excitation in a magic wavelength trap that operates identically for
both states. We predict a ``triple magic wavelength'' at 412 nm that could
facilitate numerous experiments on trapped helium atoms, because here the
polarizabilities of the 1^1S, 2^1S and 2^3S states are all similar, small, and
positive.Comment: Shortened slightly and reformatted for Eur. Phys. J.
Self-similarity of contact line depinning from textured surfaces
The mobility of drops on surfaces is important in many biological and industrial processes, but the phenomena governing their adhesion, which is dictated by the morphology of the three-phase contact line, remain unclear. Here we describe a technique for measuring the dynamic behaviour of the three-phase contact line at micron length scales using environmental scanning electron microscopy. We examine a superhydrophobic surface on which a drop’s adhesion is governed by capillary bridges at the receding contact line. We measure the microscale receding contact angle of each bridge and show that the Gibbs criterion is satisfied at the microscale. We reveal a hitherto unknown self-similar depinning mechanism that shows how some hierarchical textures such as lotus leaves lead to reduced pinning, and counter-intuitively, how some lead to increased pinning. We develop a model to predict adhesion force and experimentally verify the model’s broad applicability on both synthetic and natural textured surfaces.National Science Foundation (U.S.) (CAREER Award 0952564)DuPont MIT AllianceNational Science Foundation (U.S.). Graduate Research Fellowship ProgramNational Science Foundation (U.S.) (Award ECS-0335765
Implementation of quantum search algorithm using classical Fourier optics
We report on an experiment on Grover's quantum search algorithm showing that
{\em classical waves} can search a -item database as efficiently as quantum
mechanics can. The transverse beam profile of a short laser pulse is processed
iteratively as the pulse bounces back and forth between two mirrors. We
directly observe the sought item being found in iterations, in
the form of a growing intensity peak on this profile. Although the lack of
quantum entanglement limits the {\em size} of our database, our results show
that entanglement is neither necessary for the algorithm itself, nor for its
efficiency.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures; minor revisions plus extra referenc
Laser-Plasma Interactions Enabled by Emerging Technologies
An overview from the past and an outlook for the future of fundamental
laser-plasma interactions research enabled by emerging laser systems
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