779 research outputs found
Project management : learning by breaking the rules
The paper explores project management in action in a large public research organisation – NLAT which decided to change its internal organisation from team-based to project-based organisation a few years ago. A systematic and comparative analysis of 8 projects reveals that adherence to the ISO 9000’s standardized rules of project management - specific staffing and project leaders, definition of milestones ex ante, procedure manuals, and formalized learning accumulation mechanisms - had little to do with the organisations success over recent years: Looking for explanations for this success, the paper focuses on the process of transferring from one project to another, enhancing organisational learning through rules breaking. We identify three elements which encourage the accumulation of knowledge and competencies, as organisational learning: low project core staffing levels which stimulates the circulation of engineers and researchers between projects and blurs project boundaries, implementing and managing thematic projects which build on specific competencies developed in dedicated projects and encouraging ‘bricolage’ to hybridise project management with traditional hierarchical management practices.PROJECT MANAGEMENT;R&D;HIGH TECH;MANAGEMENT PRACTICES
Surface plasmon modes and the Casimir energy
We show the influence of surface plasmons on the Casimir effect between two
plane parallel metallic mirrors at arbitrary distances. Using the plasma model
to describe the optical response of the metal, we express the Casimir energy as
a sum of contributions associated with evanescent surface plasmon modes and
propagative cavity modes. In contrast to naive expectations, the plasmonic
modes contribution is essential at all distances in order to ensure the correct
result for the Casimir energy. One of the two plasmonic modes gives rise to a
repulsive contribution, balancing out the attractive contributions from
propagating cavity modes, while both contributions taken separately are much
larger than the actual value of the Casimir energy. This also suggests
possibilities to tailor the sign of the Casimir force via surface plasmons.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, revtex
Geology of the Peterborough and Concord Quadrangles, New Hampshire
Guidebook for field trips in southwestern New Hampshire, southeastern Vermont, and north-central Massachusetts: New England Intercollegiate Geological Conference, 80th annual meeting, October 14, 15 and 16, 1988, Keene, New Hampshire: Trip C-
Electromagnetic vacuum energy for two parallel slabs in terms of surface, wave guide and photonic modes
The formulation of the Lifshitz formula in terms of real frequencies is
reconsidered for half spaces described by the plasma model. It is shown that
besides the surface modes (for the TM polarization), and the photonic modes,
also waveguide modes must be considered.Comment: some references adde
The role of Surface Plasmon modes in the Casimir Effect
In this paper we study the role of surface plasmon modes in the Casimir
effect. First we write the Casimir energy as a sum over the modes of a real
cavity. We may identify two sorts of modes, two evanescent surface plasmon
modes and propagative modes. As one of the surface plasmon modes becomes
propagative for some choice of parameters we adopt an adiabatic mode definition
where we follow this mode into the propagative sector and count it together
with the surface plasmon contribution, calling this contribution "plasmonic".
The remaining modes are propagative cavity modes, which we call "photonic". The
Casimir energy contains two main contributions, one coming from the plasmonic,
the other from the photonic modes. Surprisingly we find that the plasmonic
contribution to the Casimir energy becomes repulsive for intermediate and large
mirror separations. Alternatively, we discuss the common surface plasmon
defintion, which includes only evanescent waves, where this effect is not
found. We show that, in contrast to an intuitive expectation, for both
definitions the Casimir energy is the sum of two very large contributions which
nearly cancel each other. The contribution of surface plasmons to the Casimir
energy plays a fundamental role not only at short but also at large distances.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures. TQMFA200
Weak Measurements of Light Chirality with a Plasmonic Slit
We examine, both experimentally and theoretically, an interaction of tightly
focused polarized light with a slit on a metal surface supporting
plasmon-polariton modes. Remarkably, this simple system can be highly sensitive
to the polarization of the incident light and offers a perfect
quantum-weak-measurement tool with a built-in post-selection in the
plasmon-polariton mode. We observe the plasmonic spin Hall effect in both
coordinate and momentum spaces which is interpreted as weak measurements of the
helicity of light with real and imaginary weak values determined by the input
polarization. Our experiment combines advantages of (i) quantum weak
measurements, (ii) near-field plasmonic systems, and (iii) high-numerical
aperture microscopy in employing spin-orbit interaction of light and probing
light chirality.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Influence of water adsorbed on gold on van der Waals/Casimir forces
In this paper we investigate the influence of ultra thin water layer (1-1.5
nm) on the van der Waals/Casimir force between gold surfaces. Adsorbed water is
inevitably present on gold surfaces at ambient conditions as jump-up-to contact
during adhesion experiments demonstrate. Calculations based on the Lifshitz
theory give very good agreement with the experiment in absence of any water
layer for surface separations d>10 nm. However, a layer of thickness h<1.5 nm
is allowed by the error margin in force measurements. At shorter separations,
d<10 nm, the water layer can have a strong influence as calculations show for
flat surfaces. Nonetheless, in reality the influence of surface roughness must
also be considered, and it can overshadow any water layer influence at
separations comparable to the total sphere-plate rms roughness w_{shp}+w.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure, to be published in Phys. Rev.
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