14,244 research outputs found
Theory of emission from an active photonic lattice
The emission from a radiating source embedded in a photonic lattice is
calculated. The analysis considers the photonic lattice and free space as a
combined system. Furthermore, the radiating source and electromagnetic field
are quantized. Results show the deviation of the photonic lattice spectrum from
the blackbody distribution, with intracavity emission suppressed at certain
frequencies and enhanced at others. In the presence of rapid population
relaxation, where the photonic lattice and blackbody populations are described
by the same equilibrium distribution, it is found that the enhancement does not
result in output intensity exceeding that of the blackbody at the same
frequency. However, for slow population relaxation, the photonic lattice
population has a greater tendency to deviate from thermal equilibrium,
resulting in output intensities exceeding those of the blackbody, even for
identically pumped structures.Comment: 19 pages, 11 figure
Thermal Empirical Equations for Post-Flashover Compartment Fires
10th International Symposium on Fire Safety Science, College Park, MD, 19-24 June 2011Many useful correlation equations derived for estimating the heat release rate are believed to be adequate in fire engineering application. However, heat release rates in deriving those equations were mainly based on estimating mass loss rate of fuel. Flashover in a compartment fire had been studied experimentally on gasoline pool fires with results on heat release rate reported earlier. Transient heat release rates were measured by oxygen consumption calorimetry. The gas temperature curves at different locations in the room were measured instantaneously. Correlation equations on heat release rates with gas temperature reported in the literature will be reviewed and justified with the experimental results. It was observed that heat release rate estimated were lower than the experimental measurement.Department of Building Services EngineeringRefereed conference pape
Spinor Fields and Symmetries of the Spacetime
In the background of a stationary black hole, the "conserved current" of a
particular spinor field always approaches the null Killing vector on the
horizon. What's more, when the black hole is asymptotically flat and when the
coordinate system is asymptotically static, then the same current also
approaches the time Killing vector at the spatial infinity. We test these
results against various black hole solutions and no exception is found. The
spinor field only needs to satisfy a very general and simple constraint.Comment: 19 page
Excitation Induced Dephasing in Semiconductor Quantum Dots
A quantum kinetic theory is used to compute excitation induced dephasing in
semiconductor quantum dots due to the Coulomb interaction with a continuum of
states, such as a quantum well or a wetting layer. It is shown that a frequency
dependent broadening together with nonlinear resonance shifts are needed for a
microscopic explanation of the excitation induced dephasing in such a system,
and that excitation induced dephasing for a quantum-dot excitonic resonance is
different from quantum-well and bulk excitons.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures. Extensively revised text, two figures change
Averaging approximation to singularly perturbed nonlinear stochastic wave equations
An averaging method is applied to derive effective approximation to the
following singularly perturbed nonlinear stochastic damped wave equation \nu
u_{tt}+u_t=\D u+f(u)+\nu^\alpha\dot{W} on an open bounded domain
\,, \,. Here is a small parameter
characterising the singular perturbation, and \,, \,, parametrises the strength of the noise. Some scaling transformations
and the martingale representation theorem yield the following effective
approximation for small , u_t=\D u+f(u)+\nu^\alpha\dot{W} to an error of
\ord{\nu^\alpha}\,.Comment: 16 pages. Submitte
Electron tunneling time measured by photoluminescence excitation correlation spectroscopy
The tunneling time for electrons to escape from the lowest quasibound state in the quantum wells of GaAs/AlAs/GaAs/AlAs/GaAs double-barrier heterostructures with barriers between 16 and 62 Ă
has been measured at 80 K using photoluminescence excitation correlation spectroscopy. The decay time for samples with barrier thicknesses from 16 Ă
(â12 ps) to 34 Ă
(â800 ps) depends exponentially on barrier thickness, in good agreement with calculations of electron tunneling time derived from the energy width of the resonance. Electron and heavy hole carrier densities are observed to decay at the same rate, indicating a coupling between the two decay processes
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