1,422 research outputs found
Thin-disk laser pump schemes for large number of passes and moderate pump source quality
Novel thin-disk laser pump layouts are proposed yielding an increased number
of passes for a given pump module size and pump source quality. These novel
layouts result from a general scheme which bases on merging two simpler pump
optics arrangements. Some peculiar examples can be realized by adapting
standard commercially available pump optics simply by intro ducing an
additional mirror-pair. More pump passes yield better efficiency, opening the
way for usage of active materials with low absorption. In a standard multi-pass
pump design, scaling of the number of beam passes brings ab out an increase of
the overall size of the optical arrangement or an increase of the pump source
quality requirements. Such increases are minimized in our scheme, making them
eligible for industrial applicationsComment: 16 pages, 9 figure
Noise sensitivity of an atomic velocity sensor
We use Bloch oscillations to accelerate coherently Rubidium atoms. The
variation of the velocity induced by this acceleration is an integer number
times the recoil velocity due to the absorption of one photon. The measurement
of the velocity variation is achieved using two velocity selective Raman
pi-pulses: the first pulse transfers atoms from the hyperfine state 5S1/2 |F=2,
mF=0> to 5S1/2, |F=1, mF = 0> into a narrow velocity class. After the
acceleration of this selected atomic slice, we apply the second Raman pulse to
bring the resonant atoms back to the initial state 5S1/2, |F=2, mF = 0>. The
populations in (F=1 and F=2) are measured separately by using a one-dimensional
time-of-flight technique. To plot the final velocity distribution we repeat
this procedure by scanning the Raman beam frequency of the second pulse. This
two pi-pulses system constitutes then a velocity sensor. Any noise in the
relative phase shift of the Raman beams induces an error in the measured
velocity. In this paper we present a theoretical and an experimental analysis
of this velocity sensor, which take into account the phase fluctuations during
the Raman pulses
Compact 20-pass thin-disk amplifier insensitive to thermal lensing
We present a multi-pass amplifier which passively compensates for distortions
of the spherical phase front occurring in the active medium. The design is
based on the Fourier transform propagation which makes the output beam
parameters insensitive to variation of thermal lens effects in the active
medium. The realized system allows for 20 reflections on the active medium and
delivers a small signal gain of 30 with M = 1.16. Its novel geometry
combining Fourier transform propagations with 4f-imaging stages as well as a
compact array of adjustable mirrors allows for a layout with a footprint of 400
mm x 1000 mm.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figure
Theoretical Analysis of a Large Momentum Beamsplitter using Bloch Oscillations
In this paper, we present the implementation of Bloch oscillations in an
atomic interferometer to increase the separation of the two interfering paths.
A numerical model, in very good agreement with the experiment, is developed.
The contrast of the interferometer and its sensitivity to phase fluctuations
and to intensity fluctuations are also calculated. We demonstrate that the
sensitivity to phase fluctuations can be significantly reduced by using a
suitable arrangement of Bloch oscillations pulses
A magneto-gravitational trap for precision studies of gravitational quantum states
Observation time is the key parameter for improving the precision of
measurements of gravitational quantum states of particles levitating above a
reflecting surface. We propose a new method of long confinement in such states
of atoms, anti-atoms, neutrons and other particles possessing a magnetic
moment. The Earth gravitational field and a reflecting mirror confine particles
in the vertical direction. The magnetic field originating from electric current
passing through a vertical wire confines particles in the radial direction.
Under appropriate conditions, motions along these two directions are decoupled
to a high degree. We estimate characteristic parameters of the problem, and
list possible systematic effects that limit storage times due to the coupling
of the two motions. In the limit of low particle velocities and magnetic
fields, precise control of the particle motion and long storage times in the
trap can provide ideal conditions for both gravitational, optical and hyperfine
spectroscopy: for the sensitive verification of the equivalence principle for
antihydrogen atoms; for increasing the accuracy of optical and hyperfine
spectroscopy of atoms and antiatoms; for improving constraints on extra
fundamental interactions from experiments with neutrons, atoms and antiatoms
Deciphering the folding kinetics of transmembrane helical proteins
Nearly a quarter of genomic sequences and almost half of all receptors that
are likely to be targets for drug design are integral membrane proteins.
Understanding the detailed mechanisms of the folding of membrane proteins is a
largely unsolved, key problem in structural biology. Here, we introduce a
general model and use computer simulations to study the equilibrium properties
and the folding kinetics of a -based two helix bundle fragment
(comprised of 66 amino-acids) of Bacteriorhodopsin. Various intermediates are
identified and their free energy are calculated toghether with the free energy
barrier between them. In 40% of folding trajectories, the folding rate is
considerably increased by the presence of non-obligatory intermediates acting
as traps. In all cases, a substantial portion of the helices is rapidly formed.
This initial stage is followed by a long period of consolidation of the helices
accompanied by their correct packing within the membrane. Our results provide
the framework for understanding the variety of folding pathways of helical
transmembrane proteins
Probing Supergravity Models with Indirect Experimental Signatures
We explore the one-loop electroweak radiative corrections in the context of
the traditional minimal and the string-inspired
supergravity models by calculating explicitly vacuum-polarization and
vertex-correction contributions to the and
parameters. We also include in this analysis the constraint from whose inclusive branching ratio has been
actually measured very recently by CLEO. We find that by combining these three
most important indirect experimental signatures and using the most recent
experimental values for them, is excluded for
in both the minimal supergravity and the no-scale supergravity. We also find that is
excluded for any sign of in the minimal () supergravity
model.Comment: RevTeX 3.0, 16 Pages+4 figures(not included but available as a
uuencoded file from [email protected]), SNUTP-94-9
Zeroing In On the Top Quark, LSP and Scalar Higgs Masses
We estimate the top quark, lightest sparticle (LSP) and scalar higgs masses
within a supersymmetric grand unified framework in which and the electroweak symmetry is radiatively broken. The requirement
that the calculated quark mass lie close to its measured value, together
with the cosmological constraint , fixes the top quark
mass to be . The LSP (of bino purity
has mass . In the scalar
higgs sector the CP-odd scalar mass . With
, as suggested by the decay , we find and .Comment: 14 pages in plain LaTeX, BA-93-25, PRL-TH-93/
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