1,266 research outputs found
Prompt fluorescence from biphenylene in liquid solution: Absence of detectable S2→S0 fluorescence and its implications, vibrational structure and polarization of S1→S0 fluorescence, and orientational relaxation of molecules in S1.
The prompt emission from S0→S2 photoexcited biphenylene in 3-methylpentane has been investigated. No prompt S2→S0 fluorescence has been observed. The implications of this negative result are discussed. It is shown that lengthening of the radiative lifetime of S2 due to intermediate strong S2-S1 coupling is the likely cause of the absence of detectable S2-S0 fluorescence. The observable resonance Raman lines of biphenylene can be assigned to totally symmetric vibrations. The position of S1,0 is determined by a vibrational analysis of the S1→S0 fluorescence. The polarization degree P of the S1→S0 fluorescence is positive. From the dependence of P on temperature and viscosity, orientational relaxation times of biphenylene in S1 are determined with Perrin's formula
Comparative Analysis of the Major Polypeptides from Liver Gap Junctions and Lens Fiber Junctions
Gap junctions from rat liver and fiber junctions from bovine lens have similar septilaminar profiles when examined by thin-section electron microscopy and differ only slightly with respect to the packing of intramembrane particles in freeze-fracture images. These similarities have often led to lens fiber junctions being referred to as gap junctions. Junctions from both sources were isolated as enriched subcellular fractions and their major polypeptide components compared biochemically and immunochemically. The major liver gap junction polypeptide has an apparent molecular weight of 27,000, while a 25,000-dalton polypeptide is the major component of lens fiber junctions. The two polypeptides are not homologous when compared by partial peptide mapping in SDS. In addition, there is not detectable antigenic similarity between the two polypeptides by immunochemical criteria using antibodies to the 25,000-dalton lens fiber junction polypeptide. Thus, in spite of the ultrastructural similarities, the gap junction and the lens fiber junction are comprised of distinctly different polypeptides, suggesting that the lens fiber junction contains a unique gene product and potentially different physiological properties
Self-cooling of a micro-mirror by radiation pressure
We demonstrate passive feedback cooling of a mechanical resonator based on
radiation pressure forces and assisted by photothermal forces in a high-finesse
optical cavity. The resonator is a free-standing high-reflectance micro-mirror
(of mass m=400ng and mechanical quality factor Q=10^4) that is used as
back-mirror in a detuned Fabry-Perot cavity of optical finesse F=500. We
observe an increased damping in the dynamics of the mechanical oscillator by a
factor of 30 and a corresponding cooling of the oscillator modes below 10 K
starting from room temperature. This effect is an important ingredient for
recently proposed schemes to prepare quantum entanglement of macroscopic
mechanical oscillators.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figures, minor correction
Attractive Casimir Forces in a Closed Geometry
We study the Casimir force acting on a conducting piston with arbitrary cross
section. We find the exact solution for a rectangular cross section and the
first three terms in the asymptotic expansion for small height to width ratio
when the cross section is arbitrary. Though weakened by the presence of the
walls, the Casimir force turns out to be always attractive. Claims of repulsive
Casimir forces for related configurations, like the cube, are invalidated by
cutoff dependence.Comment: An updated version to coincide with the one published December 2005
in PRL. 4 pages, 2 figure
Topological and subsystem codes on low-degree graphs with flag qubits
In this work we introduce two code families, which we call the heavy hexagon
code and heavy square code. Both code families are implemented by assigning
physical data and ancilla qubits to both vertices and edges of low degree
graphs. Such a layout is particularly suitable for superconducting qubit
architectures to minimize frequency collisions and crosstalk. In some cases,
frequency collisions can be reduced by several orders of magnitude. The heavy
hexagon code is a hybrid surface/Bacon-Shor code mapped onto a (heavy)
hexagonal lattice whereas the heavy square code is the surface code mapped onto
a (heavy) square lattice. In both cases, the lattice includes all the ancilla
qubits required for fault-tolerant error-correction. Naively, the limited qubit
connectivity might be thought to limit the error-correcting capability of the
code to less than its full distance. Therefore, essential to our construction
is the use of flag qubits. We modify minimum weight perfect matching decoding
to efficiently and scalably incorporate information from measurements of the
flag qubits and correct up to the full code distance while respecting the
limited connectivity. Simulations show that high threshold values for both
codes can be obtained using our decoding protocol. Further, our decoding scheme
can be adapted to other topological code families.Comment: 20 pages, 21 figures, Comments welcome! V2 conforms to journal
specification
Suppression of Unwanted Interactions in a Hybrid Two-Qubit System
Mitigating crosstalk errors, whether classical or quantum mechanical, is
critically important for achieving high-fidelity entangling gates in
multi-qubit circuits. For weakly anharmonic superconducting qubits, unwanted
interactions can be suppressed by combining qubits with opposite
anharmonicity. We present experimental measurements and theoretical modeling of
two-qubit gate error for gates based on the cross resonance interaction between
a capacitively shunted flux qubit and a transmon and demonstrate the
elimination of the interaction.Comment: 5+16 pages, 5+13 figures, corrected typos, hyperlinking fixed,
modified sections in supplemen
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