3,416 research outputs found
Generation of parabolic similaritons in tapered silicon photonic wires: comparison of pulse dynamics at telecom and mid-IR wavelengths
We study the generation of parabolic self-similar optical pulses in tapered
Si photonic nanowires (Si-PhNWs) both at telecom (\lambda=1.55 \mu m) and
mid-IR (\lambda=2.2 \mu m) wavelengths. Our computational study is based on a
rigorous theoretical model, which fully describes the influence of linear and
nonlinear optical effects on pulse propagation in Si-PhNWs with arbitrarily
varying width. Numerical simulations demonstrate that, in the normal dispersion
regime, optical pulses evolve naturally into parabolic pulses upon propagating
in millimeter-long tapered Si-PhNWs, with the efficiency of this pulse
reshaping process being strongly dependent on the spectral and pulse parameter
regime in which the device operates, as well as the particular shape of the
Si-PhNW.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Project Mercury Postlaunch Trajectory Report for Mercury-Atlas Mission No. 4 (MA-4) (Spacecraft 8A - Atlas 88-D) and for Mercury-Atlas Mission No. 5 (MA-5) (Spacecraft 9 - Atlas 93-D)
Achieving sub-diffraction imaging through bound surface states in negative-refracting photonic crystals at the near-infrared
We report the observation of imaging beyond the diffraction limit due to
bound surface states in negative refraction photonic crystals. We achieve an
effective negative index figure-of-merit [-Re(n)/Im(n)] of at least 380, ~125x
improvement over recent efforts in the near-infrared, with a 0.4 THz bandwidth.
Supported by numerical and theoretical analyses, the observed near-field
resolution is 0.47 lambda, clearly smaller than the diffraction limit of 0.61
lambda. Importantly, we show this sub-diffraction imaging is due to the
resonant excitation of surface slab modes, allowing refocusing of
non-propagating evanescent waves
Wavelength conversion and parametric amplification of optical pulses via quasi-phase-matched FWM in long-period Bragg silicon waveguides
We present a theoretical analysis supported by comprehensive numerical
simulations of quasi phase-matched four-wave mixing (FWM) of ultrashort optical
pulses that propagate in weakly width-modulated silicon photonic nanowire
gratings. Our study reveals that, by properly designing the optical waveguide
such that the interacting pulses co-propagate with the same group-velocity, a
conversion efficiency enhancement of more than 15 dB, as compared to a uniform
waveguide, can readily be achieved. We also analyze the dependence of the
conversion efficiency and FWM gain on the pulse width, time delay, walk-off
parameter, and grating modulation depth.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
How do I sound to me? Perceived changes in communication in Parkinson's disease
Objective: To examine self and carer perceived changes in communication associated with Parkinson's disease and relate these to speech intelligibility, gender, age and other disease measures.
Design: Cross-sectional survey of a hospital- and community-based sample of 176 people with Parkinson's disease and their carers using a questionnaire based on semantic differential techniques.
Participants: One hundred and four people with Parkinson's disease with no history of communication difficulties prior to onset of their Parkinson's disease and 45 primary carers who returned completed questionnaires.
Main outcome measures: Differences in ratings for `before' the onset of Parkinson's disease versus present status.
Results: There was a strong perception of negative impact on communication between `before' and `now', irrespective of age and gender and largely independent of disease severity and duration, intelligibility and cognitive status. Activities of daily living (assessed by Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale (UPDRS) II) and depression rating scale scores had the strongest association with change (adjusted R 2 0.27). There was a significant correlation between the rank order of perceived change in features examined in people with Parkinson's disease versus their carers, though in general carers rated change as having less impact.
Conclusions: Parkinson's disease exercises a strong influence on communication even before apparent alterations to intelligibility or motor status
Measuring attitude toward theistic faith : assessing the Astley-Francis Scale among Christian, Muslim and secular youth in England
Empirical research within the social scientific study of religion in general and within the psychology of religion in particular remains very conscious of the complex nature of its subject matter. Empirical research in this field needs to take cognisance of the many forms in which religion is expressed (say, Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism, Islam, Judaism, and Sikhism) and the many facets within the forms (say, beliefs, behaviours and affiliation). Working in the 1970s, Francis (1978a; 1978b) advanced the view that the attitudinal dimension of religion offered a particularly fruitful basis for coordinating empirical enquiry into the correlates, antecedents and consequences of religiosity across the life span
A negative mass theorem for surfaces of positive genus
We define the "sum of squares of the wavelengths" of a Riemannian surface
(M,g) to be the regularized trace of the inverse of the Laplacian. We normalize
by scaling and adding a constant, to obtain a "mass", which is scale invariant
and vanishes at the round sphere. This is an anlaog for closed surfaces of the
ADM mass from general relativity. We show that if M has positive genus then on
each conformal class, the mass attains a negative minimum. For the minimizing
metric, there is a sharp logarithmic Hardy-Littlewood-Sobolev inequality and a
Moser-Trudinger-Onofri type inequality.Comment: 8 page
Metaphoric coherence: Distinguishing verbal metaphor from `anomaly\u27
Theories and computational models of metaphor comprehension generally circumvent the question of metaphor versus “anomaly” in favor of a treatment of metaphor versus literal language. Making the distinction between metaphoric and “anomalous” expressions is subject to wide variation in judgment, yet humans agree that some potentially metaphoric expressions are much more comprehensible than others. In the context of a program which interprets simple isolated sentences that are potential instances of cross‐modal and other verbal metaphor, I consider some possible coherence criteria which must be satisfied for an expression to be “conceivable” metaphorically. Metaphoric constraints on object nominals are represented as abstracted or extended along with the invariant structural components of the verb meaning in a metaphor. This approach distinguishes what is preserved in metaphoric extension from that which is “violated”, thus referring to both “similarity” and “dissimilarity” views of metaphor. The role and potential limits of represented abstracted properties and constraints is discussed as they relate to the recognition of incoherent semantic combinations and the rejection or adjustment of metaphoric interpretations
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