2,587 research outputs found
Theoretical tools for atom laser beam propagation
We present a theoretical model for the propagation of non self-interacting
atom laser beams. We start from a general propagation integral equation, and we
use the same approximations as in photon optics to derive tools to calculate
the atom laser beam propagation. We discuss the approximations that allow to
reduce the general equation whether to a Fresnel-Kirchhoff integral calculated
by using the stationary phase method, or to the eikonal. Within the paraxial
approximation, we also introduce the ABCD matrices formalism and the beam
quality factor. As an example, we apply these tools to analyse the recent
experiment by Riou et al. [Phys. Rev. Lett. 96, 070404 (2006)]
Optical parametric oscillation with distributed feedback in cold atoms
There is currently a strong interest in mirrorless lasing systems, in which
the electromagnetic feedback is provided either by disorder (multiple
scattering in the gain medium) or by order (multiple Bragg reflection). These
mechanisms correspond, respectively, to random lasers and photonic crystal
lasers. The crossover regime between order and disorder, or correlated
disorder, has also been investigated with some success. Here, we report
one-dimensional photonic-crystal lasing (that is, distributed feedback lasing)
with a cold atom cloud that simultaneously provides both gain and feedback. The
atoms are trapped in a one-dimensional lattice, producing a density modulation
that creates a strong Bragg reflection with a small angle of incidence. Pumping
the atoms with auxiliary beams induces four-wave mixing, which provides
parametric gain. The combination of both ingredients generates a mirrorless
parametric oscillation with a conical output emission, the apex angle of which
is tunable with the lattice periodicity
Tuberculosis treatment in a refugee and migrant population: 20 years of experience on the Thai-Burmese border.
Although tuberculosis (TB) is a curable disease, it remains a major global health problem and an important cause of morbidity and mortality among vulnerable populations, including refugees and migrants
Mechanisms for Lasing with Cold Atoms as the Gain Medium
We realize a laser with a cloud of cold rubidium atoms as gain medium, placed
in a low-finesse cavity. Three different regimes of laser emission are observed
corresponding respectively to Mollow, Raman and Four Wave Mixing mechanisms. We
measure an output power of up to 300 W and present the main properties of
these different lasers in each regime
A new regime of anomalous penetration of relativistically strong laser radiation into an overdense plasma
It is shown that penetration of relativistically intense laser light into an
overdense plasma, accessible by self-induced transparency, occurs over a finite
length only. The penetration length depends crucially on the overdense plasma
parameter and increases with increasing incident intensity after exceeding the
threshold for self-induced transparency. Exact analytical solutions describing
the plasma-field distributions are presented.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures in 2 separate eps files; submitted to JETP Letter
Field evaluation of two rapid diagnostic tests for Neisseria meningitidis serogroup A during the 2006 outbreak in Niger.
The Pastorex((R)) (BioRad) rapid agglutination test is one of the main rapid diagnostic tests (RDTs) for meningococcal disease currently in use in the "meningitis belt". Earlier evaluations, performed after heating and centrifugation of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) samples, under good laboratory conditions, showed high sensitivity and specificity. However, during an epidemic, the test may be used without prior sample preparation. Recently a new, easy-to-use dipstick RDT for meningococcal disease detection on CSF was developed by the Centre de Recherche Médicale et Sanitaire in Niger and the Pasteur Institute in France. We estimate diagnostic accuracy in the field during the 2006 outbreak of Neisseria meningitidis serogroup A in Maradi, Niger, for the dipstick RDT and Pastorex((R)) on unprepared CSF, (a) by comparing each test's sensitivity and specificity with previously reported values; and (b) by comparing results for each test on paired samples, using McNemar's test. We also (c) estimate diagnostic accuracy of the dipstick RDT on diluted whole blood. We tested unprepared CSF and diluted whole blood from 126 patients with suspected meningococcal disease presenting at four health posts. (a) Pastorex((R)) sensitivity (69%; 95%CI 57-79) was significantly lower than found previously for prepared CSF samples [87% (81-91); or 88% (85-91)], as was specificity [81% (95%CI 68-91) vs 93% (90-95); or 93% (87-96)]. Sensitivity of the dipstick RDT [89% (95%CI 80-95)] was similar to previously reported values for ideal laboratory conditions [89% (84-93) and 94% (90-96)]. Specificity, at 62% (95%CI 48-75), was significantly lower than found previously [94% (92-96) and 97% (94-99)]. (b) McNemar's test for the dipstick RDT vs Pastorex((R)) was statistically significant (p<0.001). (c) The dipstick RDT did not perform satisfactorily on diluted whole blood (sensitivity 73%; specificity 57%).Sensitivity and specificity of Pastorex((R)) without prior CSF preparation were poorer than previously reported results from prepared samples; therefore we caution against using this test during an epidemic if sample preparation is not possible. For the dipstick RDT, sensitivity was similar to, while specificity was not as high as previously reported during a more stable context. Further studies are needed to evaluate its field performance, especially for different populations and other serogroups
The creation of modulated monoclinic aperiodic composites in n-alkane/urea compounds
Citation: Mariette, C., Guerin, L., Rabiller, P., Chen, Y. S., Bosak, A., Popov, A., . . . Toudic, B. (2015). The creation of modulated monoclinic aperiodic composites in n-alkane/urea compounds. Zeitschrift Fur Kristallographie, 230(1), 5-11. doi:10.1515/zkri-2014-1773n-Dodecane/urea is a member of the prototype series of n-alkane/urea inclusion compounds. At room temperature, it presents a quasi-one dimensional liquid-like state for the confined guest molecules within the rigid, hexagonal framework of the urea host. At lower temperatures, we report the existence of two other phases. Below T-c=248 K there appears a phase with rank four superspace group P6(1)22(00 gamma), the one typically observed at room temperature in n-alkane/urea compounds with longer guest molecules. A misfit parameter, defined by the ratio gamma=C-h/C-g (C-host/C-guest), is found to be 0.632 +/- 0.005. Below T-c1=123 K, a monoclinic modulated phase is created with a constant shift along c of the guest molecules in adjacent channels. The maximal monoclinic space group for this structure is P12(1)1(alpha 0 gamma). Analogies and differences with n-heptane/urea, which also presents a monoclinic, modulated low-temperature phase, are discussed
Radiative rotational lifetimes and state-resolved relative detachment cross sections from photodetachment thermometry of molecular anions in a cryogenic storage ring
Photodetachment thermometry on a beam of OH in a cryogenic storage ring
cooled to below 10 K is carried out using two-dimensional, frequency and time
dependent photodetachment spectroscopy over 20 minutes of ion storage. In
equilibrium with the low-level blackbody field, we find an effective radiative
temperature near 15 K with about 90% of all ions in the rotational ground
state. We measure the J = 1 natural lifetime (about 193 s) and determine the
OH rotational transition dipole moment with 1.5% uncertainty. We also
measure rotationally dependent relative near-threshold photodetachment cross
sections for photodetachment thermometry.Comment: Manuscript LaTeX with 5 pages, 3 figures, and 1 table plus LaTeX
supplement with 12 pages, 3 figures and 3 tables. This article has been
accepted by Physical Review Letter
Electromagnetic energy penetration in the self-induced transparency regime of relativistic laser-plasma interactions
Two scenarios for the penetration of relativistically intense laser radiation
into an overdense plasma, accessible by self-induced transparency, are
presented. For supercritical densities less than 1.5 times the critical one,
penetration of laser energy occurs by soliton-like structures moving into the
plasma. At higher background densities laser light penetrates over a finite
length only, that increases with the incident intensity. In this regime
plasma-field structures represent alternating electron layers separated by
about half a wavelength by depleted regions.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures, submitted for publication to PR
- …