5,231 research outputs found
Determinisitic Writing and Control of the Dark Exciton Spin using Short Single Optical Pulses
We demonstrate that the quantum dot-confined dark exciton forms a long-lived
integer spin solid state qubit which can be deterministically on-demand
initiated in a pure state by one optical pulse. Moreover, we show that this
qubit can be fully controlled using short optical pulses, which are several
orders of magnitude shorter than the life and coherence times of the qubit. Our
demonstrations do not require an externally applied magnetic field and they
establish that the quantum dot-confined dark exciton forms an excellent solid
state matter qubit with some advantages over the half-integer spin qubits such
as the confined electron and hole, separately. Since quantum dots are
semiconductor nanostructures that allow integration of electronic and photonic
components, the dark exciton may have important implications on implementations
of quantum technologies consisting of semiconductor qubits.Comment: Added two authors, minor edits to figure captions, expanded
discussion of dark exciton eigenstate
All-Optical Depletion of Dark Excitons from a Semiconductor Quantum Dot
Semiconductor quantum dots are considered to be the leading venue for
fabricating on-demand sources of single photons. However, the generation of
long-lived dark excitons imposes significant limits on the efficiency of these
sources. We demonstrate a technique that optically pumps the dark exciton
population and converts it to a bright exciton population, using intermediate
excited biexciton states. We show experimentally that our method considerably
reduces the DE population while doubling the triggered bright exciton emission,
approaching thereby near-unit fidelity of quantum dot depletion.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Predictive computer models for bioflim detachment properties in Pseudomonas aeruginosa
Microbial biofilm communities are protected against environmental extremes or clearance by antimicrobial agents or the host immune response. They also serve as a site from which microbial populations search for new niches by dispersion via single planktonic cells or by detachment by protected biofilm aggregates that, until recently, were thought to become single cells ready for attachment. Mathematically modeling these events has provided investigators with testable hypotheses for further study. Such was the case in the recent article by Kragh et al. (K. N. Kragh, J. B. Hutchison, G. Melaugh, C. Rodesney, A. E. Roberts, Y. Irie, P. Ø. Jensen, S. P. Diggle, R. J. Allen, V. Gordon, and T. Bjarnsholt, mBio 7:e00237-16, 2016, http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mBio.00237-16), in which investigators were able to identify the differential competitive advantage of biofilm aggregates to directly attach to surfaces compared to the single-celled planktonic populations. Therefore, as we delve deeper into the properties of the biofilm mode of growth, not only do we need to understand the complexity of biofilms, but we must also account for the properties of the dispersed and detached populations and their effect on reseeding
The Level-0 Muon Trigger for the LHCb Experiment
A very compact architecture has been developed for the first level Muon
Trigger of the LHCb experiment that processes 40 millions of proton-proton
collisions per second. For each collision, it receives 3.2 kBytes of data and
it finds straight tracks within a 1.2 microseconds latency. The trigger
implementation is massively parallel, pipelined and fully synchronous with the
LHC clock. It relies on 248 high density Field Programable Gate arrays and on
the massive use of multigigabit serial link transceivers embedded inside FPGAs.Comment: 33 pages, 16 figures, submitted to NIM
All-solid-state electrochromic reflectance device for emittance modulation in the far-infrared spectral region
All-solid-state electrochromic reflectance devices for thermal emittance modulation were designed for operation in the spectral region from mid- to far-infrared wavelengths (2–40 μm). All device constituent layers were grown by magnetron sputtering. The electrochromic (polycrystalline WO3), ion conductor (Ta2O5), and Li+ ion-storage layer (amorphous WO3), optimized for their infrared (IR) optical thicknesses, are sandwiched between a highly IR reflecting Al mirror, and a 90% IR transmissive Al grid top electrode, thereby meeting the requirements for a reversible Li+ ion insertion electrochromic device to operate within the 300 K blackbody emission range. Multicycle optical switching and emittance modulation is demonstrated. The measured change in emissivity of the device is to 20%
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