5,869 research outputs found
Dimensionality of the spatio-temporal entanglement of PDC photon pairs
In this work the Schmidt number of the two-photon state generated by
parametric-down conversion (PDC) is evaluated in the framework of a fully
spatio-temporal model for PDC. A comparison with the results obtained in either
purely spatial or purely temporal models shows that the degree of entanglement
of the PDC state cannot be trivially reduced to the product of the Schmidt
numbers obtained in models with lower dimensionality, unless the detected
bandwidth is very narrow. This result is a consequence of the non-factorability
of the state in the spatial and temporal degrees of freedoms of twin photons.
In the limit of a broad pump beam, we provide a geometrical interpretation of
the Schmidt number, as the ratio between the volume of the phase matching
region and of a correlation volume.Comment: 17 pages, 10 figures. Submitted to Phys. Rev.
Positronium signature in organic liquid scintillators for neutrino experiments
Electron anti-neutrinos are commonly detected in liquid scintillator
experiments via inverse beta decay, by looking at the coincidence between the
reaction products, neutron and positron. Prior to positron annihilation, an
electron-positron pair may form an orthopositronium (o-Ps) state, with a mean
life of a few ns. Even if the o-Ps decay is speeded up by spin flip or pick off
effects, it may introduce distortions in the photon emission time distribution,
crucial for position reconstruction and pulse shape discrimination algorithms
in anti-neutrino experiments. Reversing the problem, the o-Ps induced time
distortion represents a new signature for tagging anti-neutrinos in liquid
scintillator.
In this paper, we report the results of measurements of the o-Ps formation
probability and lifetime, for the most used solvents for organic liquid
scintillators in neutrino physics (pseudocumene, linear alkyl benzene,
phenylxylylethane, and dodecane). We characterize also a mixture of
pseudocumene +1.5 g/l of 2,5-diphenyloxazole, a fluor acting as wavelength
shifter.
In the second part of the paper, we demonstrate that the o-Ps induced
distortion of the scintillation photon emission time distributions represent an
optimal signature for tagging positrons on an event by event basis, potentially
enhancing the anti-neutrino detection.Comment: 6 pages, 9 figure
The 32-GHz performance of the DSS-14 70-meter antenna: 1989 configuration
The results of preliminary 32 GHz calibrations of the 70 meter antenna at Goldstone are presented. Measurements were done between March and July 1989 using Virgo A and Venus as the primary efficiency calibrators. The flux densites of theses radio sources at 32 GHz are not known with high accuracy, but were extrapolated from calibrated data at lower frequencies. The measured value of efficiency (0.35) agreed closely with the predicted value (0.32), and the results are very repeatable. Flux densities of secondary sources used in the observations were subsequently derived. These measurements were performed using a beamswitching radiometer that employed an uncooled high-electron mobility transistor (HEMT) low-noise amplifier. This system was installed primarily to determine the performance of the antenna in its 1989 configuration, but the experience will also aid in successful future calibration of the Deep Space Network (DSN) at this frequency
Attosecond electronic and nuclear quantum photodynamics of ozone: time-dependent Dyson orbitals and dipole
A nonadiabatic scheme for the description of the coupled electron and nuclear
motions in the ozone molecule was proposed recently. An initial coherent
nonstationary state was prepared as a superposition of the ground state and the
excited Hartley band. In this situation neither the electrons nor the nuclei
are in a stationary state. The multiconfiguration time dependent Hartree method
was used to solve the coupled nuclear quantum dynamics in the framework of the
adiabatic separation of the time-dependent Schr\"odinger equation. The
resulting wave packet shows an oscillation of the electron density between the
two chemical bonds. As a first step for probing the electronic motion we
computed the time-dependent molecular dipole and the Dyson orbitals. The latter
play an important role in the explanation of the photoelectron angular
distribution. Calculations of the Dyson orbitals are presented both for the
time-independent as well as the time-dependent situations. We limited our
description of the electronic motion to the Franck-Condon region only due to
the localization of the nuclear wave packets around this point during the first
5-6 fs
Imaging using quantum noise properties of light
We show that it is possible to estimate the shape of an object by measuring
only the fluctuations of a probing field, allowing us to expose the object to a
minimal light intensity. This scheme, based on noise measurements through
homodyne detection, is useful in the regime where the number of photons is low
enough that direct detection with a photodiode is difficult but high enough
such that photon counting is not an option. We generate a few-photon state of
multi-spatial-mode vacuum-squeezed twin beams using four-wave mixing and direct
one of these twin fields through a binary intensity mask whose shape is to be
imaged. Exploiting either the classical fluctuations in a single beam or
quantum correlations between the twin beams, we demonstrate that under some
conditions quantum correlations can provide an enhancement in sensitivity when
estimating the shape of the object
Wild Lactobacillus casei Group Strains: Potentiality to Ferment Plant Derived Juices
Plant derived beverages have recently gained consumers’ interest, particularly due to their intrinsic functional properties. They can also act as non-dairy carriers for probiotics and prebiotics, meeting the needs of lactose allergic/intolerant people and vegans. Direct fermentation of fruit and vegetables juices by probiotic lactic acid bacteria could be a tool to increase safety, shelf-life, nutrients bioavailability and to improve sensorial features of plant derived juices. This study aims to screen wild Lactobacillus casei-group strains isolated from dairy matrices for probiotic features, such as acid and bile salts resistance, and test them for the potentiality to ferment celery and orange juices. Strains’ ability to produce exopolysaccharides (EPS) in situ is also checked. These evaluations were performed for the first time in fruit and vegetables matrices by means of an impedometric analysis, recently shown to be a suitable and rapid method to measure microorganisms’ growth, acidification performances and EPS production. This study allowed the selection of three potentially probiotic L. casei-group wild strains able to ferment fruit and vegetable juices and also producing EPS. These strains with three-in-one abilities could be used to produce new functional fermented plant derived juices
Detection of sub-shot-noise spatial correlation in high-gain parametric down-conversion
Using a 1GW-1ps pump laser pulse in high gain parametric down-conversion
allows us to detect sub-shot-noise spatial quantum correlation with up to one
hundred photoelectrons per mode, by means of a high efficiency CCD. The
statistics is performed in single-shot over independent spatial replica of the
system. The paper highlights the evidence of quantum correlation between
symmetrical signal and idler spatial areas in the far field, in the high gain
regime. In accordance with the predictions of numerical calculations the
observed transition from the quantum to the classical regime is interpreted as
a consequence of the narrowing of the down-converted beams in the very high
gain regime.Comment: 4,2 pages, 4 figure
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