14 research outputs found
Microwave Spectroscopy of Cold Rubidium Atoms
The effect of microwave radiation on the resonance fluorescence of a cloud of
cold atoms in a magnetooptical trap is studied. The radiation
frequency was tuned near the hyperfine splitting frequency of rubidium atoms in
the 5S ground state. The microwave field induced magnetic dipole transitions
between the magnetic sublevels of the 5S(F=2) and 5S(F=3) states, resulting in
a change in the fluorescence signal. The resonance fluorescence spectra were
recorded by tuning the microwave radiation frequency. The observed spectra were
found to be substantially dependent on the transition under study and the
frequency of a repump laser used in the cooling scheme.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Perceived Object Stability Depends on Multisensory Estimates of Gravity
BACKGROUND: How does the brain estimate object stability? Objects fall over when the gravity-projected centre-of-mass lies outside the point or area of support. To estimate an object's stability visually, the brain must integrate information across the shape and compare its orientation to gravity. When observers lie on their sides, gravity is perceived as tilted toward body orientation, consistent with a representation of gravity derived from multisensory information. We exploited this to test whether vestibular and kinesthetic information affect this visual task or whether the brain estimates object stability solely from visual information. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: In three body orientations, participants viewed images of objects close to a table edge. We measured the critical angle at which each object appeared equally likely to fall over or right itself. Perceived gravity was measured using the subjective visual vertical. The results show that the perceived critical angle was significantly biased in the same direction as the subjective visual vertical (i.e., towards the multisensory estimate of gravity). CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Our results rule out a general explanation that the brain depends solely on visual heuristics and assumptions about object stability. Instead, they suggest that multisensory estimates of gravity govern the perceived stability of objects, resulting in objects appearing more stable than they are when the head is tilted in the same direction in which they fall
Nuclear moments
Nuclear Moments focuses on the processes, methodologies, reactions, and transformations of molecules and atoms, including magnetic resonance and nuclear moments. The book first offers information on nuclear moments in free atoms and molecules, including theoretical foundations of hyperfine structure, isotope shift, spectra of diatomic molecules, and vector model of molecules. The manuscript then takes a look at nuclear moments in liquids and crystals. Discussions focus on nuclear paramagnetic and magnetic resonance and nuclear quadrupole resonance. The text discusses nuclear moments and nuc