3,436 research outputs found
Optical alignment and spinning of laser-trapped microscopic particles
Light-induced rotation of absorbing microscopic particles by transfer of
angular momentum from light to the material raises the possibility of optically
driven micromachines. The phenomenon has been observed using elliptically
polarized laser beams or beams with helical phase structure. But it is
difficult to develop high power in such experiments because of overheating and
unwanted axial forces, limiting the achievable rotation rates to a few hertz.
This problem can in principle be overcome by using transparent particles,
transferring angular momentum by a mechanism first observed by Beth in 1936,
when he reported a tiny torque developed in a quartz waveplate due to the
change in polarization of transmitted light. Here we show that an optical
torque can be induced on microscopic birefringent particles of calcite held by
optical tweezers. Depending on the polarization of the incident beam, the
particles either become aligned with the plane of polarization (and thus can be
rotated through specified angles) or spin with constant rotation frequency.
Because these microscopic particles are transparent, they can be held in
three-dimensional optical traps at very high power without heating. We have
observed rotation rates in excess of 350 Hz.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Model for hypernucleus production in heavy ion collisions
We estimate the production cross sections of hypernuclei in projectile like
fragment (PLF) in heavy ion collisions. The discussed scenario for the
formation cross section of hypernucleus is: (a) Lambda particles are produced
in the participant region but have a considerable rapidity spread and (b)
Lambda with rapidity close to that of the PLF and total momentum (in the rest
system of PLF) up to Fermi motion can then be trapped and produce hypernuclei.
The process (a) is considered here within Heavy Ion Jet Interacting Generator
HIJING-BBbar model and the process (b) in the canonical thermodynamic model
(CTM). We estimate the production cross-sections for light hypernuclei for C +
C at 3.7 GeV total nucleon-nucleon center of mass energy and for Ne+Ne and
Ar+Ar collisions at 5.0 GeV. By taking into account explicitly the impact
parameter dependence of the colliding systems, it is found that the cross
section is different from that predicted by the coalescence model and large
discrepancy is obtained for 6_He and 9_Be hypernuclei.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures, 3 tables, revtex4, added reference
Mechanical Effects of Optical Vortices
We concentrate on the forces and torques exerted on transparent and absorbing particles trapped in laser beams containing optical vortices. We review previous theoretical and experimental work and then present new calculations of the effect of vortex beams on absorbing particles
Optical microrheology using rotating laser-trapped particles
We demonstrate an optical system that can apply and accurately measure the
torque exerted by the trapping beam on a rotating birefringent probe particle.
This allows the viscosity and surface effects within liquid media to be
measured quantitatively on a micron-size scale using a trapped rotating
spherical probe particle. We use the system to measure the viscosity inside a
prototype cellular structure.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures. v2: bibliographic details, minor text correction
Design of the Pluto Event Generator
We present the design of the simulation package Pluto, aimed at the study of
hadronic interactions at SIS and FAIR energies. Its main mission is to offer a
modular framework with an object-oriented structure, thereby making additions
such as new particles, decays of resonances, new models up to modules for
entire changes easily applicable. Overall consistency is ensured by a plugin-
and distribution manager. Particular features are the support of a modular
structure for physics process descriptions, and the possibility to access the
particle stream for on-line modifications. Additional configuration and
self-made classes can be attached by the user without re-compiling the package,
which makes Pluto extremely configurable.Comment: Presented at the 17th International Conference on Computing in High
Energy and Nuclear Physic
Design of the Pluto Event Generator
We present the design of the simulation package Pluto, aimed at the study of
hadronic interactions at SIS and FAIR energies. Its main mission is to offer a
modular framework with an object-oriented structure, thereby making additions
such as new particles, decays of resonances, new models up to modules for
entire changes easily applicable. Overall consistency is ensured by a plugin-
and distribution manager. Particular features are the support of a modular
structure for physics process descriptions, and the possibility to access the
particle stream for on-line modifications. Additional configuration and
self-made classes can be attached by the user without re-compiling the package,
which makes Pluto extremely configurable.Comment: Presented at the 17th International Conference on Computing in High
Energy and Nuclear Physic
Design of the Pluto Event Generator
We present the design of the simulation package Pluto, aimed at the study of
hadronic interactions at SIS and FAIR energies. Its main mission is to offer a
modular framework with an object-oriented structure, thereby making additions
such as new particles, decays of resonances, new models up to modules for
entire changes easily applicable. Overall consistency is ensured by a plugin-
and distribution manager. Particular features are the support of a modular
structure for physics process descriptions, and the possibility to access the
particle stream for on-line modifications. Additional configuration and
self-made classes can be attached by the user without re-compiling the package,
which makes Pluto extremely configurable.Comment: Presented at the 17th International Conference on Computing in High
Energy and Nuclear Physic
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