32,435 research outputs found
Photon molecules in atomic gases trapped near photonic crystal waveguides
Realizing systems that support robust, controlled interactions between
individual photons is an exciting frontier of nonlinear optics. To this end,
one approach that has emerged recently is to leverage atomic interactions to
create strong and spatially non-local interactions between photons. In
particular, effective interactions have been successfully created via
interactions between atoms excited to Rydberg levels. Here, we investigate an
alternative approach, in which atomic interactions arise via their common
coupling to photonic crystal waveguides. This technique takes advantage of the
ability to separately tailor the strength and range of interactions via the
dispersion engineering of the structure itself, which can lead to qualitatively
new types of phenomena. As an example, we discuss the formation of correlated
transparency windows, in which photonic states of a certain number and shape
selectively propagate through the system. Through this technique, we show in
particular that one can create molecular-like potentials that lead to molecular
bound states of photon pairs
On D0-branes in Gepner models
We show why and when D0-branes at the Gepner point of Calabi-Yau manifolds
given as Fermat hypersurfaces exist.Comment: 22 pages, substantial improvements in sections 2 and 3, references
added, version to be publishe
The effect of environmental plasma interactions on the performance of the solar sail system
Interaction between the solar sail and the natural plasma environment were examined for deleterious impacts upon the operation of the sail and its associated payload. Electrostatic charging of the sail in the solar wind and in near earth environment were examined. Deployment problems were studied. An analysis of electromechanical oscillations coupling the sail to the natural plasma was performed. As a result of these studies, it was concluded that none of these effects will have a significant negative impact upon the sail operation. The natural environment will be significantly perturbed and this will preclude measurements of electric and magnetic fields from an attached payload
D-instantons probing D3-branes and the AdS/CFT correspondence
D-instantons are considered as a probe of coinciding D3-branes. They can
feel an external metric via the commutator terms in their effective action. We
show that when the D-instantons are separated from the D3-branes, the metric
which is probed at the one loop level, {\it exactly} coincides with that of the
BPS R-R 3-brane. Interesting connection of this result to the possible
explanation of the AdS/CFT correspondence within IKKT M-atrix theory is
discussed.Comment: 8pp., Latex. Minor changes, misprints are correcte
Statistical Uncertainties in Temperature Diagnostics for Hot Coronal Plasma Using the ASCA SIS
Statistical uncertainties in determining the temperatures of hot (0.5 keV to
10 keV) coronal plasmas are investigated. The statistical precision of various
spectral temperature diagnostics is established by analyzing synthetic ASCA
Solid-state Imaging Spectrometer (SIS) CCD spectra. The diagnostics considered
are the ratio of hydrogen-like to helium-like line complexes of
elements, line-free portions of the continuum, and the entire spectrum. While
fits to the entire spectrum yield the highest statistical precision, it is
argued that fits to the line-free continuum are less susceptible to atomic data
uncertainties but lead to a modest increase in statistical uncertainty over
full spectral fits. Temperatures deduced from line ratios can have similar
accuracy but only over a narrow range of temperatures. Convenient estimates of
statistical accuracies for the various temperature diagnostics are provided
which may be used in planning ASCA SIS observations.Comment: postscript file of 8 pages+3 figures; 4 files tarred, compressed and
uuencoded. To appear in the Astrophysical Journal Letters; contents copyright
1994 American Astronomical Societ
Orientifolds of Gepner Models
We systematically construct and study Type II Orientifolds based on Gepner
models which have N=1 supersymmetry in 3+1 dimensions. We classify the parity
symmetries and construct the crosscap states. We write down the conditions that
a configuration of rational branes must satisfy for consistency (tadpole
cancellation and rank constraints) and spacetime supersymmetry. For certain
cases, including Type IIB orientifolds of the quintic and a two parameter
model, one can find all solutions in this class. Depending on the parity, the
number of vacua can be large, of the order of 10^{10}-10^{13}. For other
models, it is hard to find all solutions but special solutions can be found --
some of them are chiral. We also make comparison with the large volume regime
and obtain a perfect match. Through this study, we find a number of new
features of Type II orientifolds, including the structure of moduli space and
the change in the type of O-planes under navigation through non-geometric
phases.Comment: 142 page
The Breakdown of Topology at Small Scales
We discuss how a topology (the Zariski topology) on a space can appear to
break down at small distances due to D-brane decay. The mechanism proposed
coincides perfectly with the phase picture of Calabi-Yau moduli spaces. The
topology breaks down as one approaches non-geometric phases. This picture is
not without its limitations, which are also discussed.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figure
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