84 research outputs found
Gallium Arsenide (GaAs) Quantum Photonic Waveguide Circuits
Integrated quantum photonics is a promising approach for future practical and
large-scale quantum information processing technologies, with the prospect of
on-chip generation, manipulation and measurement of complex quantum states of
light. The gallium arsenide (GaAs) material system is a promising technology
platform, and has already successfully demonstrated key components including
waveguide integrated single-photon sources and integrated single-photon
detectors. However, quantum circuits capable of manipulating quantum states of
light have so far not been investigated in this material system. Here, we
report GaAs photonic circuits for the manipulation of single-photon and
two-photon states. Two-photon quantum interference with a visibility of 94.9
+/- 1.3% was observed in GaAs directional couplers. Classical and quantum
interference fringes with visibilities of 98.6 +/- 1.3% and 84.4 +/- 1.5%
respectively were demonstrated in Mach-Zehnder interferometers exploiting the
electro-optic Pockels effect. This work paves the way for a fully integrated
quantum technology platform based on the GaAs material system.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
Evolution of temporal coherence in confined exciton-polariton condensates
© 2018 American Physical Society. We study the influence of spatial confinement on the second-order temporal coherence of the emission from a semiconductor microcavity in the strong coupling regime. The confinement, provided by etched micropillars, has a favorable impact on the temporal coherence of solid state quasicondensates that evolve in our device above threshold. By fitting the experimental data with a microscopic quantum theory based on a quantum jump approach, we scrutinize the influence of pump power and confinement and find that phonon-mediated transitions are enhanced in the case of a confined structure, in which the modes split into a discrete set. By increasing the pump power beyond the condensation threshold, temporal coherence significantly improves in devices with increased spatial confinement, as revealed in the transition from thermal to coherent statistics of the emitted light
Towards an Asymptotic-Safety Scenario for Chiral Yukawa Systems
We search for asymptotic safety in a Yukawa system with a chiral
symmetry, serving as a toy model for the
standard-model Higgs sector. Using the functional RG as a nonperturbative tool,
the leading-order derivative expansion exhibits admissible non-Ga\ssian
fixed-points for which arise from a conformal threshold
behavior induced by self-balanced boson-fermion fluctuations. If present in the
full theory, the fixed-point would solve the triviality problem. Moreover, as
one fixed point has only one relevant direction even with a reduced hierarchy
problem, the Higgs mass as well as the top mass are a prediction of the theory
in terms of the Higgs vacuum expectation value. In our toy model, the fixed
point is destabilized at higher order due to massless Goldstone and fermion
fluctuations, which are particular to our model and have no analogue in the
standard model.Comment: 16 pages, 8 figure
Asymptotic safety of simple Yukawa systems
We study the triviality and hierarchy problem of a Z_2-invariant Yukawa
system with massless fermions and a real scalar field, serving as a toy model
for the standard-model Higgs sector. Using the functional RG, we look for UV
stable fixed points which could render the system asymptotically safe. Whether
a balancing of fermionic and bosonic contributions in the RG flow induces such
a fixed point depends on the algebraic structure and the degrees of freedom of
the system. Within the region of parameter space which can be controlled by a
nonperturbative next-to-leading order derivative expansion of the effective
action, we find no non-Gaussian fixed point in the case of one or more fermion
flavors. The fermion-boson balancing can still be demonstrated within a model
system with a small fractional flavor number in the symmetry-broken regime. The
UV behavior of this small-N_f system is controlled by a conformal Higgs
expectation value. The system has only two physical parameters, implying that
the Higgs mass can be predicted. It also naturally explains the heavy mass of
the top quark, since there are no RG trajectories connecting the UV fixed point
with light top masses.Comment: 14 pages, 3 figures, v2: references added, typos corrected, minor
numerical correction
A New Method to Predict the Epidemiology of Fungal Keratitis by Monitoring the Sales Distribution of Antifungal Eye Drops in Brazil
Purpose: Fungi are a major cause of keratitis, although few medications are licensed for their treatment. The aim of this study is to observe the variation in commercialisation of antifungal eye drops, and to predict the seasonal distribution of fungal keratitis in Brazil. Methods: Data from a retrospective study of antifungal eye drops sales from the only pharmaceutical ophthalmologic laboratory, authorized to dispense them in Brazil (Opthalmos) were gathered. These data were correlated with geographic and seasonal distribution of fungal keratitis in Brazil between July 2002 and June 2008. Results: A total of 26,087 antifungal eye drop units were sold, with a mean of 2.3 per patient. There was significant variation in antifungal sales during the year (p < 0.01). A linear regression model displayed a significant association between reduced relative humidity and antifungal drug sales (R-2 = 0.17, p < 0.01). Conclusions: Antifungal eye drops sales suggest that there is a seasonal distribution of fungal keratitis. A possible interpretation is that the third quarter of the year (a period when the climate is drier), when agricultural activity is more intense in Brazil, suggests a correlation with a higher incidence of fungal keratitis. A similar model could be applied to other diseases, that are managed with unique, or few, and monitorable medications to predict epidemiological aspects.Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Cientifico e TecnologicoConselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Cientifico e Tecnologico [302005/2009-9]Fundacao de Apoio ao Ensino, Pesquisa e Assistencia do Hospital das Clinicas da Faculdade de Medicina de Ribeirao Preto da Universidade de Sao PauloFundacao de Apoio ao Ensino, Pesquisa e Assistencia do Hospital das Clinicas da Faculdade de Medicina de Ribeirao Preto da Universidade de Sao Paul
Contribution of human hematopoietic stem cells to liver repair
Immune-deficient mouse models of liver damage allow examination of human stem cell migration to sites of damage and subsequent contribution to repair and survival. In our studies, in the absence of a selective advantage, transplanted human stem cells from adult sources did not robustly become hepatocytes, although some level of fusion or hepatic differentiation was documented. However, injected stem cells did home to the injured liver tissue and release paracrine factors that hastened endogenous repair and enhanced survival. There were significantly higher levels of survival in mice with a toxic liver insult that had been transplanted with human stem cells but not in those transplanted with committed progenitors. Transplantation of autologous adult stem cells without conditioning is a relatively safe therapy. Adult stem cells are known to secrete bioactive factors that suppress the local immune system, inhibit fibrosis (scar formation) and apoptosis, enhance angiogenesis, and stimulate recruitment, retention, mitosis, and differentiation of tissue-residing stem cells. These paracrine effects are distinct from the direct differentiation of stem cells to repair tissue. In patients at high risk while waiting for a liver transplant, autologous stem cell therapy could be considered, as it could delay the decline in liver function
Androgens and the breast
Androgens have important physiological effects in women while at the same time they may be implicated in breast cancer pathologies. However, data on the effects of androgens on mammary epithelial proliferation and/or breast cancer incidence are not in full agreement. We performed a literature review evaluating current clinical, genetic and epidemiological data regarding the role of androgens in mammary growth and neoplasia. Epidemiological studies appear to have significant methodological limitations and thus provide inconclusive results. The study of molecular defects involving androgenic pathways in breast cancer is still in its infancy. Clinical and nonhuman primate studies suggest that androgens inhibit mammary epithelial proliferation and breast growth while conventional estrogen treatment suppresses endogenous androgens. Abundant clinical evidence suggests that androgens normally inhibit mammary epithelial proliferation and breast growth. Suppression of androgens using conventional estrogen treatment may thus enhance estrogenic breast stimulation and possibly breast cancer risk. Addition of testosterone to the usual hormone therapy regimen may diminish the estrogen/progestin increase in breast cancer risk but the impact of this combined use on mammary gland homeostasis still needs evaluation
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