49,136 research outputs found
Light controlled photon tunneling
Recent measurements of photon tunneling through individual subwavelength
pinholes in a gold film covered with a layer of polydiacetylene (Phys. Rev.
Letters 88, 187402 (2002)) provided strong indication of "photon blockade"
effect similar to Coulomb blockade phenomenon observed in single-electron
tunneling experiments. Here we report first observation of photon tunneling
been blocked (gated) by light at a different wavelength. This observation
suggests possibility of building new class of photon tunneling gating devices
for all-optical signal processing.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figure
Magnon-Phonon Quantum Correlation Thermometry
A large fraction of quantum science and technology requires low-temperature environments such as those afforded by dilution refrigerators. In these cryogenic environments, accurate thermometry can be difficult to implement, expensive, and often requires calibration to an external reference. Here, we theoretically propose a primary thermometer based on measurement of a hybrid system consisting of phonons coupled via a magnetostrictive interaction to magnons. Thermometry is based on a cross-correlation measurement in which the spectrum of back-action driven motion is used to scale the thermomechanical motion, providing a direct measurement of the phonon temperature independent of experimental parameters. Combined with a simple low-temperature compatible microwave cavity readout, this primary thermometer is expected to become a promising alternative for thermometry below 1 K
Volume 39 (2007)
The 2007 edition of The Broad River Review was edited by C. V. Davis. The publication contains fiction, non-fiction, art, poetry, and photography. The covers, Color Canyon and Slot Canyon, were photographed by Randy McNeilly. The winner of the J. Calvin Koontz Poetry Award, given annually for a portfolio of poetry to a senior English major, is Eric Proctor. The Broad River Review Editor\u27s Prizes in Fiction and Poetry are chosen among all submissions from Gardner-Webb University students.The Editor\u27s Prize in Poetry was awarded to Jess Snyder for her peom titled, The Buzzards Circle Home. The Editor\u27s Prize in Fiction was awarded to Matthew Gordon Dimick for his work titled, Jamie.https://digitalcommons.gardner-webb.edu/brreview/1013/thumbnail.jp
Volume 48 (2016)
The 2016 edition of The Broad River Review was edited by C. V. Davis. The publication contains fiction, non-fiction, art, poetry, and photography. The cover, Rusty Hinge, was photographed by Brian Michael Barbieto. The winner of the J. Calvin Koontz Poetry Award, given annually for a portfolio of poetry to a senior English major, is MaryKate Powell. The Broad River Review Editor\u27s Prize in Poetry is chosen among all submissions from Gardner-Webb University students. The winner of the poetry award is Ilari Pass for the poem titled, Kaleidoscope in Place of Conversation. The Rash Awards, named in honor of Ron Rash, a 1976 graduate of Gardner-Webb University, are awarded annually for outstanding works in poetry and fiction. The 2015 award recipients are Sam Grieve for his fiction work titled, “We Are All Nobody” and Patricia L. Hamilton for her poem titled “Trespass.” Aaron Gwyn and David Kirby served as judges for the fiction and poetry contests, respectively.https://digitalcommons.gardner-webb.edu/brreview/1015/thumbnail.jp
Effect of pig weaning age and commingling after the nursery phase on humoral and behavioral indicators of well-being and on growth performance
Two hundred and sixteen pigs were weaned at 14 or 21 d of age to determine the effect of weaning age and commingling after the nursery phase on growth and behavior of pigs in a wean-tofinish facility. Pigs were divided into older and younger age groups and allotted 12 pigs/pen with nine replications of each group. At the end of the nursery phase (d 34 after weaning), one-half of the pigs in each group were removed and commingled for the grower/finisher phase and the other half remained in their original pens. Beginning at weaning (d 0), pigs were monitored via camera surveillance following weaning, commingling, and on d 65 after weaning. While in the nursery phase, older pigs had greater gain and feed intake than younger pigs, however, younger pigs were more efficient throughout the nursery phase than older pigs. Toward the end of the grower/finisher period, younger pigs had greater gain, feed intake, and gain:feed than older pigs and reached a common weight 4 d sooner. Younger pigs spent more time standing or moving during the nursery phase than older pigs. Immediately following commingling, the younger, unmixed pigs spent more time feeding. However on d 65 after weaning, the older, commingled pigs and younger, unmixed pigs spent more time feeding than older, unmixed pigs and younger, commingled pigs. In conclusion, younger pigs grew slower than older pigs during the nursery phase; however, younger pigs gained more during the finishing period. Additionally, weaning age and commingling influenced feeding behavior during the grower/finisher period
Immersion microscopy based on photonic crystal materials
Theoretical model of the enhanced optical resolution of the surface plasmon
immersion microscope is developed, which is based on the optics of surface
plasmon Bloch waves in the tightly bound approximation. It is shown that a
similar resolution enhancement may occur in a more general case of an immersion
microscope based on photonic crystal materials with either positive or negative
effective refractive index. Both signs of the effective refractive index have
been observed in our experiments with surface plasmon immersion microscope,
which is also shown to be capable of individual virus imaging.Comment: 23 pages, 10 figure
Classical Region of a Trapped Bose Gas
The classical region of a Bose gas consists of all single-particle modes that
have a high average occupation and are well-described by a classical field.
Highly-occupied modes only occur in massive Bose gases at ultra-cold
temperatures, in contrast to the photon case where there are highly-occupied
modes at all temperatures. For the Bose gas the number of these modes is
dependent on the temperature, the total number of particles and their
interaction strength. In this paper we characterize the classical region of a
harmonically trapped Bose gas over a wide parameter regime. We use a
Hartree-Fock approach to account for the effects of interactions, which we
observe to significantly change the classical region as compared to the
idealized case. We compare our results to full classical field calculations and
show that the Hartree-Fock approach provides a qualitatively accurate
description of classical region for the interacting gas.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures; updated to include new results with interaction
The Ground State of the Pseudogap in Cuprate Superconductors
We present studies of the electronic structure of La2-xBaxCuO4, a system
where the superconductivity is strongly suppressed as static spin and charge
orders or "stripes" develop near the doping level of x=1/8. Using
angle-resolved photoemission and scanning tunneling microscopy, we detect an
energy gap at the Fermi surface with magnitude consistent with d-wave symmetry
and with linear density of states, vanishing only at four nodal points, even
when superconductivity disappears at x=1/8. Thus, the non-superconducting,
"striped" state at x=1/8 is consistent with a phase incoherent d-wave
superconductor whose Cooper pairs form spin/charge ordered structures instead
of becoming superconducting.Comment: This is the author's version of the wor
Manifolds associated with -colored regular graphs
In this article we describe a canonical way to expand a certain kind of
-colored regular graphs into closed -manifolds by
adding cells determined by the edge-colorings inductively. We show that every
closed combinatorial -manifold can be obtained in this way. When ,
we give simple equivalent conditions for a colored graph to admit an expansion.
In addition, we show that if a -colored regular graph
admits an -skeletal expansion, then it is realizable as the moment graph of
an -dimensional closed -manifold.Comment: 20 pages with 9 figures, in AMS-LaTex, v4 added a new section on
reconstructing a space with a -action for which its moment graph is
a given colored grap
Relaxation dynamics of the Lieb-Liniger gas following an interaction quench: A coordinate Bethe-ansatz analysis
We investigate the relaxation dynamics of the integrable Lieb-Liniger model
of contact-interacting bosons in one dimension following a sudden quench of the
collisional interaction strength. The system is initially prepared in its
noninteracting ground state and the interaction strength is then abruptly
switched to a positive value, corresponding to repulsive interactions between
the bosons. We calculate equal-time correlation functions of the nonequilibrium
Bose field for small systems of up to five particles via symbolic evaluation of
coordinate Bethe-ansatz expressions for operator matrix elements between
Lieb-Liniger eigenstates. We characterize the relaxation of the system by
comparing the time-evolving correlation functions following the quench to the
equilibrium correlations predicted by the diagonal ensemble and relate the
behavior of these correlations to that of the quantum fidelity between the
many-body wave function and the initial state of the system. Our results for
the asymptotic scaling of local second-order correlations with increasing
interaction strength agree with the predictions of recent generalized
thermodynamic Bethe-ansatz calculations. By contrast, third-order correlations
obtained within our approach exhibit a markedly different power-law dependence
on the interaction strength as the Tonks-Girardeau limit of infinitely strong
interactions is approached.Comment: 19 pages, 10 figures. v3: Final version. Typos fixed, and other minor
change
- …