995 research outputs found
Effect of charging on CdSe/CdS dot-in-rods single-photon emission
The photon statistics of CdSe/CdS dot-in-rods nanocrystals is studied with a
method involving post-selection of the photon detection events based on the
photoluminescence count rate. We show that flickering between two states needs
to be taken into account to interpret the single-photon emission properties.
With post-selection we are able to identify two emitting states: the exciton
and the charged exciton (trion), characterized by different lifetimes and
different second order correlation functions. Measurements of the second order
autocorrelation function at zero delay with post- selection shows a degradation
of the single photon emission for CdSe/CdS dot-in-rods in a charged state that
we explain by deriving the neutral and charged biexciton quantum yields.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figure
A multilocus sequence analysis of Xanthomonas campestris reveals a complex structure within crucifer-attacking pathovars of this species
Previous classification of Xanthomonas campestris has defined six pathovars (aberrans, armoraciae, barbareae, campestris, incanae, and raphani) that cause diseases on cruciferous plants. However, pathogenicity assays with a range of strains and different hosts identifies only three types of symptom: black rot, leaf spot and bacterial blight. These findings raise the question of the genetic relatedness between strains assigned to different pathovars or symptom phenotypes. Here we have addressed this issue by multilocus sequence analysis of 42 strains. The X. campestris species was polymorphic at the 8 loci analysed and had a high genetic diversity; 23 sequence types were identified of which 16 were unique. All strains that induce black rot (pathovars aberrans and campestris) were genetically close but split in two groups. Only three clonal complexes were found, all within pathovar campestris. The assignment of the genome-sequenced strain 756C to pathovar raphani suggested from disease symptoms was confirmed, although this group of strains was particularly polymorphic. Strains belonging to pathovars barbareae and incanae were closely related, but distinct from pathovar campestris. There is evidence of genetic exchanges of housekeeping genes within this species as deduced from a clear incongruence between individual gene phylogenies and from network structures from SplitsTree analysis. Overall this study showed that the high genetic diversity derived equally from recombination and point mutation accumulation. However, X. campestris remains a species with a clonal evolution driven by a differential adaptation to cruciferous hosts
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The Developmental Role of Agouti in Color Pattern Evolution
Animal color patterns can affect fitness in the wild; however, little is known about the mechanisms that control their formation and subsequent evolution. We took advantage of two locally camouflaged populations of Peromyscus mice to show that the negative regulator of adult pigmentation, Agouti, also plays a key developmental role in color pattern evolution. Genetic and functional analyses showed that ventral-specific embryonic expression of Agouti establishes a prepattern by delaying the terminal differentiation of ventral melanocytes. Moreover, a skin-specific increase in both the level and spatial domain of Agouti expression prevents melanocyte maturation in a regionalized manner, resulting in a novel and adaptive color pattern. Thus, natural selection favors late-acting, tissue-specific changes in embryonic Agouti expression to produce large changes in adult color pattern.Organismic and Evolutionary Biolog
Photon correlations for colloidal nanocrystals and their clusters
Images of semiconductor `dot in rods' and their small clusters are studied by
measuring the second-order correlation function with a spatially resolving ICCD
camera. This measurement allows one to distinguish between a single dot and a
cluster and, to a certain extent, to estimate the number of dots in a cluster.
A more advanced measurement is proposed, based on higher-order correlations,
enabling more accurate determination of the number of dots in a small cluster.
Nonclassical features of the light emitted by such a cluster are analyzed.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
RPANDA: an R package for macroevolutionary analyses on phylogenetic trees
A number of approaches for studying macroevolution using phylogenetic trees have been developed in the last few years. Here, we present RPANDA, an R package that implements modelâfree and modelâbased phylogenetic comparative methods for macroevolutionary analyses. The modelâfree approaches implemented in RPANDA are recently developed approaches stemming from graph theory that allow summarizing the information contained in phylogenetic trees, computing distances between trees, and clustering them accordingly. They also allow identifying distinct branching patterns within single trees. RPANDA also implements likelihoodâbased models for fitting various diversification models to phylogenetic trees. It includes birthâdeath models with i) constant, ii) timeâdependent and iii) environmentalâdependent speciation and extinction rates. It also includes models with equilibrium diversity derived from the coalescent process, as well as a likelihoodâbased inference framework to fit the individualâbased model of Speciation by Genetic Differentiation, which is an extension of Hubbell's neutral theory of biodiversity. RPANDA can be used to (i) characterize trees by plotting their spectral density profiles (ii) compare trees and cluster them according to their similarities, (iii) identify and plot distinct branching patterns within trees, (iv) compare the fit of alternative diversification models to phylogenetic trees, (v) estimate rates of speciation and extinction, (vi) estimate and plot how these rates have varied with time and environmental variables and (vii) deduce and plot estimates of species richness through geological time. RPANDA provides investigators with a set of tools for exploring patterns in phylogenetic trees and fitting various models to these trees, thereby contributing to the ongoing development of phylogenetics in the life sciences
Demonstration and frequency noise characterization of a 17 m quantum cascade laser
We describe the properties of a continuous-wave room-temperature quantum
cascade laser operating at the long wavelength of 17 m. Long wavelength
mid-infrared quantum cascade lasers offer new opportunities for chemical
detection, vibrational spectroscopy and metrological measurements using
molecular species. In particular, probing low energy vibrational transitions
would be beneficial to the spectroscopy of large and complex molecules,
reducing intramolecular vibrational energy redistribution which acts as a
decoherence channel. By performing linear absorption spectroscopy of the v2
fundamental vibrational mode of N2O molecules, we have demonstrated the
spectral range and spectroscopic potential of this laser, and characterized its
free-running frequency noise properties. Finally, we also discuss the potential
application of this specific laser in an experiment to test fundamental physics
with ultra-cold molecules
Room temperature strong light-matter coupling in three dimensional terahertz meta-atoms
We demonstrate strong light-matter coupling in three dimensional terahertz meta-atoms at room temperature. The intersubband transition of semiconductor quantum wells with a parabolic energy potential is strongly coupled to the confined circuital mode of three-dimensional split-ring metal-semiconductor-metal resonators that have an extreme sub-wavelength volume (λ/10). The frequency of these lumped-element resonators is controlled by the size and shape of the external antenna, while the interaction volume remains constant. This allows the resonance frequency to be swept across the intersubband transition and the anti-crossing characteristic of the strong light-matter coupling regime to be observed. The Rabi splitting, which is twice the Rabi frequency (2ΩRabi), amounts to 20% of the bare transition at room temperature, and it increases to 28% at low-temperatur
Coupled-cavity terahertz quantum cascade lasers for single mode operation
We demonstrate the operation of coupled-cavity terahertz frequency quantum-cascade lasers composed of two sub-cavities separated by an air gap realized by optical lithography and dry etching. This geometry allows stable, single mode operation with typical side mode suppression ratios in the 30-40 dB range. We employ a transfer matrix method to model the mode selection mechanism. The obtained results are in good agreement with the measurements and allow prediction of the operating frequency
Photon correlations for colloidal nanocrystals and their clusters
Images of semiconductor âdot-in-rodsâ and their small clusters are studied by measuring the second-order correlation function with a spatially resolving intensified CCD camera. This measurement allows one to distinguish between a single dot and a cluster and, to a certain extent, to estimate the number of dots in a cluster. A more advanced measurement is proposed, based on higher-order correlations, enabling more accurate determination of the number of dots in a small cluster. Nonclassical features of the light emitted by such a cluster are analyzed
Optically Implemented Broadband Blueshift Switch in the Terahertz Regime
Cataloged from PDF version of article.We experimentally demonstrate, for the first time, an optically implemented blueshift tunable metamaterial in the terahertz (THz) regime. The design implies two potential resonance states, and the photoconductive semiconductor (silicon) settled in the critical region plays the role of intermediary for switching the resonator from mode 1 to mode 2. The observed tuning range of the fabricated device is as high as 26% (from 0.76 THz to 0.96 THz) through optical control to silicon. The realization of broadband blueshift tunable metamaterial offers opportunities for achieving switchable metamaterials with simultaneous redshift and blueshift tunability and cascade tunable devices. Our experimental approach is compatible with semiconductor technologies and can be used for other applications in the THz regime
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