6,216 research outputs found
The Effect of Light And Dark Periods on the Growth of Chlorella Sorokiniana: Modeling & Experimentation
Microalgae are abundant unicellular photosynthetic organisms with more than 200,000 species. They are more efficient in harvesting solar energy than land-based plants with green microalgae having more than ten times higher biodiesel productivity than the next best land-based crop. Their ability to grow in harsh environments, non-agricultural lands, and make use of wastewater, and the diversity of the products that can be extracted from them, which include cosmetics, pharmaceuticals, food supplements, biofuels, and many others, gives them the potential to replace fossil fuels and revolutionize the biotech industry. In order to move onto large scale production, first, the growth rate of the cell culture must be increased, which requires screening of promising species, studying their growth kinetics, and selecting their most suitable environment. Second, microalgae use their internal energy reservoirs (lipid bodies) during dark periods; nighttime biomass loss must be prevented. In this study, we analyzed the effect of light intensity on the growth of Chlorella sorokiniana, a promising species for biofuel production. We constructed a growth model that accurately predicts the growth response of the cell culture to varying irradiance conditions and photoperiods. We incorporated the concept of Monod kinetics into our model and quantified the effect of light intensity on biomass accumulation under lightlimiting conditions. We determined that the empirically measured maximum growth rate v parameter has a value of 0.20 h-1 which is limited by the maximum photosynthetic rate. Additionally, we determined the Monod saturation constant to be 238 |imol s-1 m-2. We found that biomass loss rate due to respiration and other metabolic activities peaked during the day (8.7x10-3 h-1), and was constant during nighttime (1.8x10-3 h-1). We determined that 5% of the biomass gained during the 16-hour day period was lost during the following 8-hour dark period, which lead to a 16% lower biomass yield when compared to a continuously illuminated culture after nine days of cultivation at a constant temperature of 30°C in a well-mixed five-liter photobioreactor. Finally, we illustrated that illuminating the dark period with low-consumption red LEDs will prevent biomass loss and enhance cell replication
Optimal Generation of Pulsed Entangled Photon Pairs
We experimentally investigate a double-pass parametric down-conversion scheme
for producing pulsed, polarization-entangled photon pairs with high visibility.
The amplitudes for creating photon pairs on each pass interfere to compensate
for distinguishing characteristics that normally degrade two-photon visibility.
The result is a high-flux source of polarization-entangled photon pulses that
does not require spectral filtering. We observe quantum interference visibility
of over 95% without the use of spectral filters for 200 femtosecond pulses, and
up to 98.1% with 5 nm bandwidth filters.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figure
Fading Gravity and Self-Inflation
We study the cosmology of a toy modified theory of gravity in which gravity
shuts off at short distances, as in the fat graviton scenario of Sundrum. In
the weak-field limit, the theory is perturbatively local, ghost-free and
unitary, although likely suffers from non-perturbative instabilities. We derive
novel self-inflationary solutions from the vacuum equations of the theory,
without invoking scalar fields or other forms of stress energy. The modified
perturbation equation expressed in terms of the Newtonian potential closely
resembles its counterpart for inflaton fluctuations. The resulting scalar
spectrum is therefore slightly red, akin to the simplest scalar-driven
inflationary models. A key difference, however, is that the gravitational wave
spectrum is generically not scale invariant. In particular the tensor spectrum
can have a blue tilt, a distinguishing feature from standard inflation.Comment: 35 pages, 4 figures. v3: version to appear in Phys. Rev.
Multiphoton path entanglement by non-local bunching
Multiphoton path entanglement is created without applying post-selection, by
manipulating the state of stimulated parametric down-conversion. A specific
measurement on one of the two output spatial modes leads to the non-local
bunching of the photons of the other mode, forming the desired multiphoton path
entangled state. We present experimental results for the case of a heralded
two-photon path entangled state and show how to extend this scheme to higher
photon numbers.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, published versio
New Ekpyrotic Cosmology
In this paper, we present a new scenario of the early Universe that contains
a pre big bang Ekpyrotic phase. By combining this with a ghost condensate, the
theory explicitly violates the null energy condition without developing any
ghost-like instabilities. Thus the contracting universe goes through a
non-singular bounce and evolves smoothly into the expanding post big bang
phase. The curvature perturbation acquires a scale-invariant spectrum well
before the bounce in this scenario. It is sourced by the scale-invariant
entropy perturbation engendered by two ekpyrotic scalar fields, a mechanism
recently proposed by Lehners et al. Since the background geometry is
non-singular at all times, the curvature perturbation remains nearly constant
on super horizon scales. It emerges from the bounce unscathed and imprints a
scale-invariant spectrum of density fluctuations in the matter-radiation fluid
at the onset of the hot big bang phase. The ekpyrotic potential can be chosen
so that the spectrum has a ``red'' tilt, in accordance with the recent data
from WMAP. As in the original Ekpyrotic scenario, the model predicts a
negligible gravity wave signal on all observable scales. As such ``New
Ekpyrotic Cosmology" provides a consistent and distinguishable alternative to
inflation to account for the origin of the seeds of large scale structure.Comment: 41 pages, 4 figures. v2: minor corrections, references added. v3:
small modifications in bounce section, references added. v4: version
published in PR
Spin-orbit mode transfer via a classical analog of quantum teleportation
We translate the quantum teleportation protocol into a sequence of coherent
operations involving three degrees of freedom of a classical laser beam. The
protocol, which we demonstrate experimentally, transfers the polarisation state
of the input beam to the transverse mode of the output beam. The role of
quantum entanglement is played by a non-separable mode describing the path and
transverse degrees of freedom. Our protocol illustrates the possibility of new
optical applications based on this intriguing classical analogue of quantum
entanglement.Comment: 5 pages, 7 figure
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