2,650 research outputs found
Continuous Formation of Vibronic Ground State RbCs Molecules via Photoassociation
We demonstrate the direct formation of vibronic ground state RbCs molecules
by photoassociation of ultracold atoms followed by radiative stabilization. The
photoassociation proceeds through deeply-bound levels of the (2)^{3}\Pi_{0^{+}}
state. From analysis of the relevant free-to-bound and bound-to-bound
Franck-Condon factors, we have predicted and experimentally verified a set of
photoassociation resonances that lead to efficient creation of molecules in the
v=0 vibrational level of the X^{1}\Sigma^{+} electronic ground state. We also
compare the observed and calculated laser intensity required to saturate the
photoassociation rate. We discuss the prospects for using short-range
photoassociation to create and accumulate samples of ultracold polar molecules
in their rovibronic ground state.Comment: 15 pages, 7 figure
Conformal anomaly of Wilson surface observables - a field theoretical computation
We make an exact field theoretical computation of the conformal anomaly for
two-dimensional submanifold observables. By including a scalar field in the
definition for the Wilson surface, as appropriate for a spontaneously broken
A_1 theory, we get a conformal anomaly which is such that N times it is equal
to the anomaly that was computed in hep-th/9901021 in the large N limit and
which relied on the AdS-CFT correspondence. We also show how the spherical
surface observable can be expressed as a conformal anomaly.Comment: 18 pages, V3: an `i' dropped in the Wilson surface, overall
normalization and misprints corrected, V4: overall normalization factor
corrected, references adde
Time-Reversal Symmetry and Universal Conductance Fluctuations in a Driven Two-Level System
In the presence of time-reversal symmetry, quantum interference gives strong
corrections to the electric conductivity of disordered systems. The
self-interference of an electron wavefunction traveling time-reversed paths
leads to effects such as weak localization and universal conductance
fluctuations. Here, we investigate the effects of broken time-reversal symmetry
in a driven artificial two-level system. Using a superconducting flux qubit, we
implement scattering events as multiple Landau-Zener transitions by driving the
qubit periodically back and forth through an avoided crossing. Interference
between different qubit trajectories give rise to a speckle pattern in the
qubit transition rate, similar to the interference patterns created when
coherent light is scattered off a disordered potential. Since the scattering
events are imposed by the driving protocol, we can control the time-reversal
symmetry of the system by making the drive waveform symmetric or asymmetric in
time. We find that the fluctuations of the transition rate exhibit a sharp peak
when the drive is time-symmetric, similar to universal conductance fluctuations
in electronic transport through mesoscopic systems
Deconstructing graviphoton from mass-deformed ABJM
Mass-deformed ABJM theory has a maximally supersymmetric fuzzy two-sphere
vacuum solution where the scalar fields are proportional to the TGRVV matrices.
We construct these matrices using Schwinger oscillators. This shows that the
ABJM gauge group that corresponds to the fuzzy two-sphere geometry is
. We deconstruct the graviphoton term in the D4 brane
theory. The normalization of this term is fixed by topological reasons. This
gives us the correct normalization of the deconstructed U(1) gauge field and
fixes the Yang -Mills coupling constant to the value which corresponds to M5
brane compactified on \mb{R}^ {1,2} \times S^3/{\mb{Z}_k}. The graviphoton
term also enable us to show that the zero mode contributions to the partition
functions for the D4 and the M5 brane agree.Comment: 26 page
Frequency-selective single photon detection using a double quantum dot
We use a double quantum dot as a frequency-tunable on-chip microwave detector
to investigate the radiation from electron shot-noise in a near-by quantum
point contact. The device is realized by monitoring the inelastic tunneling of
electrons between the quantum dots due to photon absorption. The frequency of
the absorbed radiation is set by the energy separation between the dots, which
is easily tuned with gate voltages. Using time-resolved charge detection
techniques, we can directly relate the detection of a tunneling electron to the
absorption of a single photon
The M2/M5 BPS Partition Functions from Supergravity
In the framework of the AdS/CFT duality, we calculate the supersymmetric
partition function of the superconformal field theories living in the world
volume of either -branes or -branes. We used the dual
supergravity partition function in a saddle point approximation over
supersymmetric Black Holes. Since our BHs are written in asymptotically global
co-ordinates, the dual SCFTs are in for . The
resulting partition function shows phase transitions, constraints on the phase
space and allowed us to identify unstable BPS Black hole in the phase.
These configurations should correspond to unstable configurations in the dual
theory. We also report an intriguing relation between the most general Witten
Index, computed in the above theories, and our BPS partition functions.Comment: 9 pages, 2 columns, 4 figures, revtex, typos corrected, reference
adde
Electrospun fibrinogen-PLA nanofibres for vascular tissue engineering
Here we report on the development of a new type of hybrid fibrinogen–polylactic acid (FBG–PLA) nanofibres (NFs) with improved stiffness, combining the good mechanical properties of PLA with the excellent cell recognition properties of native FBG. We were particularly interested in the dorsal and ventral cell response to the nanofibres' organization (random or aligned), using human umbilical endothelial cells (HUVECs) as a model system. Upon ventral contact with random NFs, the cells developed a stellate-like morphology with multiple projections. The well-developed focal adhesion complexes suggested a successful cellular interaction. However, time-lapse analysis shows significantly lowered cell movements, resulting in the cells traversing a relatively short distance in multiple directions. Conversely, an elongated cell shape and significantly increased cell mobility were observed in aligned NFs. To follow the dorsal cell response, artificial wounds were created on confluent cell layers previously grown on glass slides and covered with either random or aligned NFs. Time-lapse analysis showed significantly faster wound coverage (within 12 h) of HUVECs on aligned samples vs. almost absent directional migration on random ones. However, nitric oxide (NO) release shows that endothelial cells possess lowered functionality on aligned NFs compared to random ones, where significantly higher NO production was found. Collectively, our studies show that randomly organized NFs could support the endothelization of implants while aligned NFs would rather direct cell locomotion for guided neovascularization
Excited-state dynamics of dGMP measured by steady-state and femtosecond fluorescence spectroscopy.
International audienceThe room-temperature fluorescence of 2'-deoxyguanosine 5'-monophosphate (dGMP) in aqueous solution is studied by steady-state and time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy. The steady-state fluorescence spectrum of dGMP shows one band centered at 334 nm but has an extraordinary long red tail, extending beyond 700 nm. Both the fluorescence quantum yield and the relative weight of the 334 nm peak increase with the excitation wavelength. The initial fluorescence anisotropy after excitation at 267 nm is lower than 0.2 for all emission wavelengths, indicating an ultrafast S(2) --> S(1) internal conversion. The fluorescence decays depend strongly on the emission wavelength, getting longer with the wavelength. A rise time of 100-150 fs was observed for wavelengths longer than 450 nm, in accordance with a gradual red shift of the time-resolved spectra. The results are discussed in terms of a relaxation occurring mainly on the lowest excited (1)pi pi*-state surface toward a conical intersection with the ground state, in line with recent theoretical predictions. Our results show that the excited-state population undergoes a substantial "spreading out" before reaching the CI, explaining the complex dynamics observed
- …
