100 research outputs found
Near optimal single photon sources in the solid state
Single-photons are key elements of many future quantum technologies, be it
for the realisation of large-scale quantum communication networks for quantum
simulation of chemical and physical processes or for connecting quantum
memories in a quantum computer. Scaling quantum technologies will thus require
efficient, on-demand, sources of highly indistinguishable single-photons.
Semiconductor quantum dots inserted in photonic structures are ultrabright
single photon sources, but the photon indistinguishability is limited by charge
noise induced by nearby surfaces. The current state of the art for
indistinguishability are parametric down conversion single-photon sources, but
they intrinsically generate multiphoton events and hence must be operated at
very low brightness to maintain high single photon purity. To date, no
technology has proven to be capable of providing a source that simultaneously
generates near-unity indistinguishability and pure single photons with high
brightness. Here, we report on such devices made of quantum dots in
electrically controlled cavity structures. We demonstrate on-demand, bright and
ultra-pure single photon generation. Application of an electrical bias on
deterministically fabricated devices is shown to fully cancel charge noise
effects. Under resonant excitation, an indistinguishability of
is evidenced with a . The photon
extraction of and measured brightness of make this source
times brighter than any source of equal quality. This new generation of
sources open the way to a new level of complexity and scalability in optical
quantum manipulation
Supernova neutrino oscillations: A simple analytical approach
Analyses of observable supernova neutrino oscillation effects require the
calculation of the electron (anti)neutrino survival probability P_ee along a
given supernova matter density profile. We propose a simple analytical
prescription for P_ee, based on a double-exponential form for the crossing
probability and on the concept of maximum violation of adiabaticity. In the
case of two-flavor transitions, the prescription is shown to reproduce
accurately, in the whole neutrino oscillation parameter space, the results of
exact numerical calculations for generic (realistic or power-law) profiles. The
analytical approach is then generalized to cover three-flavor transitions with
(direct or inverse) mass spectrum hierarchy, and to incorporate Earth matter
effects. Compact analytical expressions, explicitly showing the symmetry
properties of P_ee, are provided for practical calculations.Comment: 22 pages (RevTeX) + 5 figures (PostScript
Dynamical Lorentz simmetry breaking from 3+1 Axion-Wess-Zumino model
We study the renormalizable abelian vector-field models in the presence of
the Wess-Zumino interaction with the pseudoscalar matter. The renormalizability
is achieved by supplementing the standard kinetic term of vector fields with
higher derivatives. The appearance of fourth power of momentum in the
vector-field propagator leads to the super-renormalizable theory in which the
-function, the vector-field renormalization constant and the anomalous
mass dimension are calculated exactly. It is shown that this model has the
infrared stable fixed point and its low-energy limit is non-trivial. The
modified effective potential for the pseudoscalar matter leads to the possible
occurrence of dynamical breaking of the Lorentz symmetry. This phenomenon is
related to the modification of Electrodynamics by means of the Chern-Simons
(CS) interaction polarized along a constant CS vector. Its presence makes the
vacuum optically active that has been recently estimated from astrophysical
data. We examine two possibilities for the CS vector to be time-like or
space-like, under the assumption that it originates from v.e.v. of some
pseudoscalar matter and show that only the latter one is consistent in the
framework of the AWZ model, because a time-like CS vector makes the vacuum
unstable under pairs creation of tachyonic photon modes with the finite vacuum
decay rate.Comment: 33 pages, no Figures, Plain TeX, submitted to Phys. Rev.
SN1987A and the Status of Oscillation Solutions to the Solar Neutrino Problem (including an appendix discussing the NC and day/night data from SNO)
We study neutrino oscillations and the level-crossing probability PLZ in
power-law potential profiles A(r)\propto r^n. We give local and global
adiabaticity conditions valid for all mixing angles theta and discuss different
representations for PLZ. For the 1/r^3 profile typical of supernova envelopes
we compare our analytical to numerical results and to earlier approximations
used in the literature. We then perform a combined likelihood analysis of the
observed SN1987A neutrino signal and of the latest solar neutrino data,
including the recent SNO CC measurement. We find that, unless all relevant
supernova parameters (released binding energy, \bar\nu_e and \bar\nu_{\mu,\tau}
temperatures) are near their lowest values found in simulations, the status of
large mixing type solutions deteriorates considerably compared to fits using
only solar data. This is sufficient to rule out the vacuum-type solutions for
most reasonable choices of astrophysics parameters. The LOW solution may still
be acceptable, but becomes worse than the SMA-MSW solution which may, in some
cases, be the best combined solution. On the other hand the LMA-MSW solution
can easily survive as the best overall solution, although its size is generally
reduced when compared to fits to the solar data only.Comment: 31 pages, 32 eps figures; 5 pages, 5 eps figures addendum in v2,
discussing the recent SNO NC data and changes in SN paramete
Bayesian Analysis of the Chaplygin Gas and Cosmological Constant Models using the SNe Ia Data
The type Ia supernovae observational data are used to estimate the parameters
of a cosmological model with cold dark matter and the Chaplygin gas. The
Chaplygin gas model depends essentially on four parameters: the Hubble
constant, the velocity of the sound of the Chaplygin gas, the curvature of the
Universe and the fraction density of the Chaplygin gas and the cold dark
matter. The Bayesian parameter estimation yields , , , , , and . These and other results indicate that a Universe
completely dominated by the Chaplygin gas is favoured, at least as the type Ia
supernovae data are concerned. A closed and accelerating Universe is also
favoured. The Bayesian statistics indicates that the Chaplygin gas model is
more likely than the standard cosmological constant () model at
55.3% confidence level when an integration on all free parameters is performed.
Assuming the spatially flat curvature, this percentage mounts to 65.3%. On the
other hand, if the density of dark matter is fixed at zero value, the Chaplygin
gas model becomes more preferred than the model at 91.8%
confidence level. Finally, the hypothesis of flat Universe and baryonic matter
() implies a Chaplygin gas model preferred over the at a confidence level of 99.4%.Comment: 19 pages, LaTeX 2e, 4 EPS figures, uses graphic
Identification of guinea pig remains in the PucarĂĄ de Tilcara (Jujuy, Argentina): Evidence in favour of the presence of the Andean breed in the Quebrada de Humahuaca
In this article, we identified rodent remains found in the PucarĂĄ de Tilcara, an archaeological site from the Argentine Northwest that was occupied by humans from 1,100 ad until the Spanish conquest. The zooarchaeological analyses were carried out using anatomical descriptions and geometric morphometric analyses of the dorsal and ventral views of mandibular remains. The results and the archaeological context discussed showed that all the rodent remains could correspond to the Andean breed of domestic guinea pigs. The combination of the methods used here gave us a strong support to the taxonomical assignment. The presence of domestic guinea pigs in archaeological sites of the northwestern Argentina was never proposed. This approach allowed us to increase knowledge about the distribution of caviines in the region, and their relationship to anthropic processes.Fil: Lopez Geronazzo, Lautaro Nahuel. Universidad Nacional de Jujuy. Instituto de Ecorregiones Andinas. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientĂficas y TĂ©cnicas. Centro CientĂfico TecnolĂłgico Conicet - Salta. Instituto de Ecorregiones Andinas; ArgentinaFil: Otero, Clarisa. Universidad Nacional de Jujuy. Instituto de Ecorregiones Andinas. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientĂficas y TĂ©cnicas. Centro CientĂfico TecnolĂłgico Conicet - Salta. Instituto de Ecorregiones Andinas; Argentina. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de FilosofĂa y Letras; ArgentinaFil: Alvarez, Alicia. Universidad Nacional de Jujuy. Instituto de Ecorregiones Andinas. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientĂficas y TĂ©cnicas. Centro CientĂfico TecnolĂłgico Conicet - Salta. Instituto de Ecorregiones Andinas; Argentina. Universidad Nacional de Jujuy. Instituto de GeologĂa Minera; ArgentinaFil: Ercoli, Marcos DarĂo. Universidad Nacional de Jujuy. Instituto de Ecorregiones Andinas. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientĂficas y TĂ©cnicas. Centro CientĂfico TecnolĂłgico Conicet - Salta. Instituto de Ecorregiones Andinas; Argentina. Universidad Nacional de Jujuy. Instituto de GeologĂa Minera; ArgentinaFil: CortĂ©s Delgado, Natalia. University of Illinois; Estados Unido
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