281 research outputs found
Late time cosmological approach in mimetic gravity
In this paper, we investigate the late-time cosmic acceleration in mimetic
gravity with Lagrange multiplier and potential in a Universe
containing, besides radiation and dark energy, a self-interacting (collisional)
matter. We obtain through the modified Friedmann equations, the main equation
that can describe the cosmological evolution and with several models from
and the well known particular model , we perform an analysis of
the late-time evolution. We examine the behavior of the Hubble parameter, the
dark energy equation of state and the total effective equation of state and we
compare in each case the resulting picture with the non-collisional matter
(assumed as dust) and also with the collisional matter in mimetic
gravity. The results obtained are in good agreement with the observational data
and show that in presence of the collisional matter the dark energy
oscillations in mimetic f(R, T) gravity can be damped.Comment: 18 pages, 2 figure
Late time cosmological approach in mimetic gravity
In this paper, we investigate the late-time cosmic acceleration in mimetic
gravity with Lagrange multiplier and potential in a Universe
containing, besides radiation and dark energy, a self-interacting (collisional)
matter. We obtain through the modified Friedmann equations, the main equation
that can describe the cosmological evolution and with several models from
and the well known particular model , we perform an analysis of
the late-time evolution. We examine the behavior of the Hubble parameter, the
dark energy equation of state and the total effective equation of state and we
compare in each case the resulting picture with the non-collisional matter
(assumed as dust) and also with the collisional matter in mimetic
gravity. The results obtained are in good agreement with the observational data
and show that in presence of the collisional matter the dark energy
oscillations in mimetic f(R, T) gravity can be damped.Comment: 18 pages, 2 figure
Thermal Imaging of Nanostructures by Quantitative Optical Phase Analysis
International audienceWe introduce an optical microscopy technique aimed at characterizing the heat generation arising from nanostructures, in a comprehensive and quantitative manner. Namely, the technique permits (i) mapping the temperature distribution around the source of heat, (ii) mapping the heat power density delivered by the source, and (iii) retrieving the absolute absorption cross section of light-absorbing structures. The technique is based on the measure of the thermal-induced refractive index variation of the medium surrounding the source of heat. The measurement is achieved using an association of a regular CCD camera along with a modified Hartmann diffraction grating. Such a simple association makes this technique straightforward to implement on any conventional microscope with its native broadband illumination conditions. We illustrate this technique on gold nanoparticles illuminated at their plasmonic resonance. The spatial resolution of this technique is diffraction limited, and temperature variations weaker than 1 K can be detected
Electro-thermal modelling for plasmonic structures in the TLM Method
This paper presents a coupled electromagnetic-thermal model for modelling temperature evolution in nano-size plasmonic heat sources. Both electromagnetic and thermal models are based on the Transmission Line Modelling (TLM) method and are coupled through a nonlinear and dispersive plasma material model. The stability and accuracy of the coupled EM-thermal model is analysed in the context of a nano-tip plasmonic heat source example
Molecular quenching and relaxation in a plasmonic tunable system
Molecular fluorescence decay is significantly modified when the emitting molecule is located near a plasmonic structure. When the lateral sizes of such structures are reduced to nanometer-scale cross sections, they can be used to accurately control and amplify the emission rate. In this Rapid Communication, we extend Green's dyadic method to quantitatively investigate both radiative and nonradiative decay channels experienced by a single fluorescent molecule confined in an adjustable dielectric-metal nanogap. The technique produces data in excellent agreement with current experimental work
Long-range and rapid transport of individual nano-objects by a hybrid electrothermoplasmonic nanotweezer
Plasmon-enhanced optical trapping is being actively studied to provide efficient manipulation of nanometre-sized objects. However, a long-standing issue with previously proposed solutions is how to controllably load the trap on-demand without relying on Brownian diffusion. Here, we show that the photo-induced heating of a nanoantenna in conjunction with an applied a.c. electric field can initiate rapid microscale fluid motion and particle transport with a velocity exceeding 10 μm s -1 , which is over two orders of magnitude faster than previously predicted. Our electrothermoplasmonic device enables on-demand long-range and rapid delivery of single nano-objects to specific plasmonic nanoantennas, where they can be trapped and even locked in place. We also present a physical model that elucidates the role of both heat-induced fluidic motion and plasmonic field enhancement in the plasmon-assisted optical trapping process. Finally, by applying a d.c. field or low-frequency a.c. field (below 10 Hz) while the particle is held in the trap by the gradient force, the trapped nano-objects can be immobilized into plasmonic hotspots, thereby providing the potential for effective low-power nanomanufacturing on-chip
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