1,011 research outputs found
Robust low loss splicing of hollow core photonic bandgap fiber to itself
Robust, low loss (0.16dB) splicing of hollow core photonic band gap fiber to itself is presented. Modal content is negligibly affected by splicing, enabling penalty-free 40Gbit/s data transmission over > 200m of spliced PBGF
The potential of effective field theory in NN scattering
We study an effective field theory of interacting nucleons at distances much
greater than the pion's Compton wavelength. In this regime the NN potential is
conjectured to be the sum of a delta function and its derivatives. The question
we address is whether this sum can be consistently truncated at a given order
in the derivative expansion, and systematically improved by going to higher
orders. Regularizing the Lippmann-Schwinger equation using a cutoff we find
that the cutoff can be taken to infinity only if the effective range is
negative. A positive effective range---which occurs in nature---requires that
the cutoff be kept finite and below the scale of the physics which has been
integrated out, i.e. O(m_\pi). Comparison of cutoff schemes and dimensional
regularization reveals that the physical scattering amplitude is sensitive to
the choice of regulator. Moreover, we show that the presence of some regulator
scale, a feature absent in dimensional regularization, is essential if the
effective field theory of NN scattering is to be useful. We also show that one
can define a procedure where finite cutoff dependence in the scattering
amplitude is removed order by order in the effective potential. However, the
characteristic momentum in the problem is given by the cutoff, and not by the
external momentum. It follows that in the presence of a finite cutoff there is
no small parameter in the effective potential, and consequently no systematic
truncation of the derivative expansion can be made. We conclude that there is
no effective field theory of NN scattering with nucleons alone.Comment: 25 pages LaTeX, 3 figures (uses epsf
Complementary analysis of modal content and properties in a 19-cell hollow core photonic band gap fiber using Time-of-Flight and S2 techniques
We study the rich multimode content of an ultra-low loss hollow core photonic bandgap fiber using two complementary techniques which allow us to investigate both short and long propagation distances. Several distinct vector modes are clearly identified, with evidence of low intermodal coupling and distributed scattering
1.45 Tbit/s low latency data transmission through 19-cell hollow core photonic band gap fibre
We report transmission of 37 x 40 Gbit/s C-band channels over 250 m of hollow core band gap fibre, at 99.7% the speed of light in vacuum. BER penalty below 1 dB as compared to back-to-back was measured across the C-band
Mitigating spectral leakage and sampling errors in spatial and spectral (S2) imaging
We present a novel method for validating the relative power value (MPI) of the Spatial and Spectral (S2) imaging technique. By applying corrections for spectral leakage and sampling errors we found the MPI determinations to be accurate within 1dB
Surface Roughness and Effective Stick-Slip Motion
The effect of random surface roughness on hydrodynamics of viscous
incompressible liquid is discussed. Roughness-driven contributions to
hydrodynamic flows, energy dissipation, and friction force are calculated in a
wide range of parameters. When the hydrodynamic decay length (the viscous wave
penetration depth) is larger than the size of random surface inhomogeneities,
it is possible to replace a random rough surface by effective stick-slip
boundary conditions on a flat surface with two constants: the stick-slip length
and the renormalization of viscosity near the boundary. The stick-slip length
and the renormalization coefficient are expressed explicitly via the
correlation function of random surface inhomogeneities. The effective
stick-slip length is always negative signifying the effective slow-down of the
hydrodynamic flows by the rough surface (stick rather than slip motion). A
simple hydrodynamic model is presented as an illustration of these general
hydrodynamic results. The effective boundary parameters are analyzed
numerically for Gaussian, power-law and exponentially decaying correlators with
various indices. The maximum on the frequency dependence of the dissipation
allows one to extract the correlation radius (characteristic size) of the
surface inhomogeneities directly from, for example, experiments with torsional
quartz oscillators.Comment: RevTeX4, 14 pages, 3 figure
Lattice calculation of hybrid mesons with improved Kogut-Susskind fermions
We report on a lattice determination of the mass of the exotic
hybrid meson using an improved Kogut-Susskind action. Results from both
quenched and dynamical quark simulations are presented. We also compare with
earlier results using Wilson quarks at heavier quark masses. The results on
lattices with three flavors of dynamical quarks show effects of sea quarks on
the hybrid propagators which probably result from coupling to two meson states.
We extrapolate the quenched results to the physical light quark mass to allow
comparison with experimental candidates for the hybrid meson. The
lattice result remains somewhat heavier than the experimental result, although
it may be consistent with the .Comment: 24 pages, 12 figures. Replaced to match published versio
Vortex Plastic Flow, , Deep in the Bose Glass and Mott-Insulator Regimes
We present simulations of flux-gradient-driven superconducting vortices
interacting with strong columnar pinning defects as an external field is
quasi-statically swept from zero through a matching field . We
analyze several measurable quantities, including the local flux density , magnetization , critical current , and the
individual vortex flow paths. We find a significant change in the behavior of
these quantities as the local flux density crosses , and quantify it
for many microscopic pinning parameters. Further, we find that for a given pin
density can be enhanced by maximizing the distance between the pins
for .Comment: 4 pages, 4 PostScript Figure
Total photoproduction cross-section at very high energy
In this paper we apply to photoproduction total cross-section a model we have
proposed for purely hadronic processes and which is based on QCD mini-jets and
soft gluon re-summation. We compare the predictions of our model with the HERA
data as well as with other models. For cosmic rays, our model predicts
substantially higher cross-sections at TeV energies than models based on
factorization but lower than models based on mini-jets alone, without soft
gluons. We discuss the origin of this difference.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figures. Accepted for publication in EPJC. Changes
concern added references, clarifications of the Soft Gluon Resummation method
used in the paper, and other changes requested by the Journal referee which
do not change the results of the original versio
Multiband tight-binding theory of disordered ABC semiconductor quantum dots: Application to the optical properties of alloyed CdZnSe nanocrystals
Zero-dimensional nanocrystals, as obtained by chemical synthesis, offer a
broad range of applications, as their spectrum and thus their excitation gap
can be tailored by variation of their size. Additionally, nanocrystals of the
type ABC can be realized by alloying of two pure compound semiconductor
materials AC and BC, which allows for a continuous tuning of their absorption
and emission spectrum with the concentration x. We use the single-particle
energies and wave functions calculated from a multiband sp^3 empirical
tight-binding model in combination with the configuration interaction scheme to
calculate the optical properties of CdZnSe nanocrystals with a spherical shape.
In contrast to common mean-field approaches like the virtual crystal
approximation (VCA), we treat the disorder on a microscopic level by taking
into account a finite number of realizations for each size and concentration.
We then compare the results for the optical properties with recent experimental
data and calculate the optical bowing coefficient for further sizes
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