21,721 research outputs found
High-order optical nonlinearity at low light levels
We observe a nonlinear optical process in a gas of cold atoms that
simultaneously displays the largest reported fifth-order nonlinear
susceptibility \chi^(5) = 1.9x10^{-12} (m/V)^4 and high transparency. The
nonlinearity results from the simultaneous cooling and crystallization of the
gas, and gives rise to efficient Bragg scattering in the form of
six-wave-mixing at low-light-levels. For large atom-photon coupling strengths,
the back-action of the scattered fields influences the light-matter dynamics.
This system may have important applications in many-body physics, quantum
information processing, and multidimensional soliton formation.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
The evolution of organic mantles on interstellar grains
By laboratory simulation of the chemical processes on dust grains it was investigated how solid organic materials can be produced in the interstellar medium. The ice mantles that accrete on grains in molecular clouds, consisting primarily of H2O, CO, H2CO, NH3, and O2, are irradiated by the internal UV field, resulting in the storage of radicals upon photodissociation of the original molecules. Transient heating events lead to the production of oxygen-rich organic species by recombination reactions. The experiments indicated that in this way the observed amount of organic material can be produced if a grain passes a few times through a molecular cloud during its life. After the destruction of the cloud the grains enter a more diffuse medium. Here they are subjected to the interstellar UV field as well as to collisions with atomic hydrogen. Experiments show that the intense photoprocessing results in the removal of small species like H2O and NH3 as well as in carbonization of the organic molecules. Contrary to this, the atomic H flux will maintain a certain hydrogen level in the mantle. These processes likely convert the original, oxygen-rich organics into an unsaturated hydrocarbon type material such as that observed towards IRS 7 and in Comet Halley grains
The organic component of interstellar grains
The 3.4 micron absorption feature observed in the spectrum of a number of Galactic Center (GC) sources indicates the presence of organic molecules in the interstellar medium. It is ascribed to the C-H stretch vibration of tetrahedrally bonded carbon. From the observed features due to the interstellar organic material, an estimate was made of its composition and abundance. The ratio of the number of C-H groups of tetrahedrally to those of trigonally bonded carbon was 1.5, the cosmic abundance of carbon was .00037, and the depth of the silicate absorption toward the GC was taken equal to 3.6
PriPeARL: A Framework for Privacy-Preserving Analytics and Reporting at LinkedIn
Preserving privacy of users is a key requirement of web-scale analytics and
reporting applications, and has witnessed a renewed focus in light of recent
data breaches and new regulations such as GDPR. We focus on the problem of
computing robust, reliable analytics in a privacy-preserving manner, while
satisfying product requirements. We present PriPeARL, a framework for
privacy-preserving analytics and reporting, inspired by differential privacy.
We describe the overall design and architecture, and the key modeling
components, focusing on the unique challenges associated with privacy,
coverage, utility, and consistency. We perform an experimental study in the
context of ads analytics and reporting at LinkedIn, thereby demonstrating the
tradeoffs between privacy and utility needs, and the applicability of
privacy-preserving mechanisms to real-world data. We also highlight the lessons
learned from the production deployment of our system at LinkedIn.Comment: Conference information: ACM International Conference on Information
and Knowledge Management (CIKM 2018
Formation of laser plasma channels in a stationary gas
The formation of plasma channels with nonuniformity of about +- 3.5% has been
demonstrated. The channels had a density of 1.2x10^19 cm-3 with a radius of 15
um and with length >= 2.5 mm. The channels were formed by 0.3 J, 100 ps laser
pulses in a nonflowing gas, contained in a cylindrical chamber. The laser beam
passed through the chamber along its axis via pinholes in the chamber walls. A
plasma channel with an electron density on the order of 10^18 - 10^19 cm-3 was
formed in pure He, N2, Ar, and Xe. A uniform channel forms at proper time
delays and in optimal pressure ranges, which depend on the sort of gas. The
influence of the interaction of the laser beam with the gas leaking out of the
chamber through the pinholes was found insignificant. However, the formation of
an ablative plasma on the walls of the pinholes by the wings of the radial
profile of the laser beam plays an important role in the plasma channel
formation and its uniformity. A low current glow discharge initiated in the
chamber slightly improves the uniformity of the plasma channel, while a high
current arc discharge leads to the formation of overdense plasma near the front
pinhole and further refraction of the laser beam. The obtained results show the
feasibility of creating uniform plasma channels in non-flowing gas targets.Comment: 15 pages, 7 figures, submitted to Physics of Plasma
Transient dynamics and momentum redistribution in cold atoms via recoil-induced resonances
We use an optically dense, anisotropic magneto-optical trap to study
recoil-induced resonances (RIRs) in the transient, high-gain regime. We find
that two distinct mechanisms govern the atomic dynamics: the finite,
frequency-dependent atomic response time, and momentum-space population
redistribution. At low input probe intensities, the residual Doppler width of
the atoms, combined with the finite atomic response time, result in a linear,
transient hysteretic effect that modifies the locations, widths, and magnitudes
of the resulting gain spectra depending on the sign of the scan chirp. When
larger intensities (\textit{i.e.}, greater than a few W/cm) are
incident on the atomic sample for several s, hole-burning in the atomic
sample's momentum distribution leads to a coherent population redistribution
that persists for approximately 100 s. We propose using RIRs to engineer
the atomic momentum distribution to enhance the nonlinear atom-photon coupling.
We present a numerical model, and compare the calculated and experimental
results to verify our interpretation.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figure
The optimization air separation plants for combined cycle MHD-power plant applications
Some of the design approaches being employed during a current supported study directed at developing an improved air separation process for the production of oxygen enriched air for magnetohydrodynamics (MHD) combustion are outlined. The ultimate objective is to arrive at conceptual designs of air separation plants, optimized for minimum specific power consumption and capital investment costs, for integration with MHD combined cycle power plants
New insights in the photochemistry of grain mantles: The identification of the 4.62 and 6.87 micron bands
The mid-IR spectral region of molecular clouds is known to show the fingerprints of molecules frozen in the icy mantles of the interstellar grains. To study the complex chemical and physical interactions on the ice mantles accreted on grains in molecular clouds numerous UV irradiation and diffusion experiments were performed. The irradiation of binary ices was studied. Using isotopic labelling on NH3/CO and NH3/O2 ices numerous compounds were identified, of which OCN(-), NO2(-), NO3(-), and NH4(+) ions reveal a new type of chemical reactions. It appeared that these compounds were formed by proton transfer reactions induced by the interaction between an acid (HNCO, HNO2, HNO3) and a base (NH3) through a hydrogen bond. This mechanism was confirmed by a study of photolyzed diluted argon mixtures. The main astrophysically relevant data from the overall study are presented. The 4.62 micron band in W33A can be reproduced with NH3/CO containing irradiated ices and was identified with OCN(-). The 6.87 micron band in W33A and other photostellar objects is reproduced with NH3/O2 containing ices and is identified with NH4(+)
Query Expansion of Zero-Hit Subject Searches: Using a Thesaurus in Conjunction with NLP Techniques
The focus of our study is zero-hit queries in keyword subject searches and the effort of increasing recall in these cases by reformulating and, then, expanding the initial queries using an external source of knowledge, namely a thesaurus. To this end, the objectives of this study are twofold. First, we perform the mapping of query terms to the thesaurus terms. Second, we use the matched terms to expand the user’s initial query by taking advantage of the thesaurus relations and implementing natural language processing (NLP) techniques. We report on the overall procedure and elaborate on key points and considerations of each step of the process
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