369 research outputs found
Dilation of the Giant Vortex State in a Mesoscopic Superconducting Loop
We have experimentally investigated the magnetisation of a mesoscopic
aluminum loop at temperatures well below the superconducting transition
temperature . The flux quantisation of the superconducting loop was
investigated with a -Hall magnetometer in magnetic field intensities
between . The magnetic field intensity periodicity observed in
the magnetization measurements is expected to take integer values of the
superconducting flux quanta . A closer inspection of the
periodicity, however, reveal a sub flux quantum shift. This fine structure we
interpret as a consequence of a so called giant vortex state nucleating towards
either the inner or the outer side of the loop. These findings are in agreement
with recent theoretical reports.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures. Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
High resolution measurements of the switching current in a Josephson tunnel junction: Thermal activation and macroscopic quantum tunneling
We have developed a scheme for a high resolution measurement of the switching
current distribution of a current biased Josephson tunnel junction using a
timing technique. The measurement setup is implemented such that the digital
control and read-out electronics are optically decoupled from the analog bias
electronics attached to the sample. We have successfully used this technique to
measure the thermal activation and the macroscopic quantum tunneling of the
phase in a small Josephson tunnel junction with a high experimental resolution.
This technique may be employed to characterize current-biased Josephson tunnel
junctions for applications in quantum information processing.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures, 1 tabl
A cascaded laser acceleration scheme for the generation of spectrally controlled proton beams
We present a novel, cascaded acceleration scheme for the generation of spectrally controlled ion beams using a laser-based accelerator in a 'double-stage' setup. An MeV proton beam produced during a relativistic laser–plasma interaction on a thin foil target is spectrally shaped by a secondary laser–plasma interaction on a separate foil, reliably creating well-separated quasi-monoenergetic features in the energy spectrum. The observed modulations are fully explained by a one-dimensional (1D) model supported by numerical simulations. These findings demonstrate that laser acceleration can, in principle, be applied in an additive manner.Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG contract no. TR18)Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (contract no. 03ZIK052)European Union (Laserlab Europe
Thermal effects on atomic friction
We model friction acting on the tip of an atomic force microscope as it is
dragged across a surface at non-zero temperatures. We find that stick-slip
motion occurs and that the average frictional force follows ,
where is the tip velocity. This compares well to recent experimental work
(Gnecco et al, PRL 84, 1172), permitting the quantitative extraction of all
microscopic parameters. We calculate the scaled form of the average frictional
force's dependence on both temperature and tip speed as well as the form of the
friction-force distribution function.Comment: Accepted for publication, Physical Review Letter
Sonoluminescence as a QED vacuum effect. I: The Physical Scenario
Several years ago Schwinger proposed a physical mechanism for
sonoluminescence in terms of changes in the properties of the
quantum-electrodynamic (QED) vacuum state. This mechanism is most often phrased
in terms of changes in the Casimir Energy: changes in the distribution of
zero-point energies and has recently been the subject of considerable
controversy. The present paper further develops this quantum-vacuum approach to
sonoluminescence: We calculate Bogolubov coefficients relating the QED vacuum
states in the presence of a homogeneous medium of changing dielectric constant.
In this way we derive an estimate for the spectrum, number of photons, and
total energy emitted. We emphasize the importance of rapid spatio-temporal
changes in refractive indices, and the delicate sensitivity of the emitted
radiation to the precise dependence of the refractive index as a function of
wavenumber, pressure, temperature, and noble gas admixture. Although the
physics of the dynamical Casimir effect is a universal phenomenon of QED,
specific experimental features are encoded in the condensed matter physics
controlling the details of the refractive index. This calculation places rather
tight constraints on the possibility of using the dynamical Casimir effect as
an explanation for sonoluminescence, and we are hopeful that this scenario will
soon be amenable to direct experimental probes. In a companion paper we discuss
the technical complications due to finite-size effects, but for reasons of
clarity in this paper we confine attention to bulk effects.Comment: 25 pages, LaTeX 209, ReV-TeX 3.2, eight figures. Minor revisions:
Typos fixed, references updated, minor changes in numerical estimates, minor
changes in some figure
In the light of directed evolution: Pathways of adaptive protein evolution
Directed evolution is a widely-used engineering strategy for improving the stabilities or biochemical functions of proteins by repeated rounds of mutation and selection. These experiments offer empirical lessons about how proteins evolve in the face of clearly-defined laboratory selection pressures. Directed evolution has revealed that single amino acid mutations can enhance properties such as catalytic activity or stability and that adaptation can often occur through pathways consisting of sequential beneficial mutations. When there are no single mutations that improve a particular protein property experiments always find a wealth of mutations that are neutral with respect to the laboratory-defined measure of fitness. These neutral mutations can open new adaptive pathways by at least 2 different mechanisms. Functionally-neutral mutations can enhance a protein's stability, thereby increasing its tolerance for subsequent functionally beneficial but destabilizing mutations. They can also lead to changes in “promiscuous” functions that are not currently under selective pressure, but can subsequently become the starting points for the adaptive evolution of new functions. These lessons about the coupling between adaptive and neutral protein evolution in the laboratory offer insight into the evolution of proteins in nature
Crossover from thermal hopping to quantum tunneling in Mn_{12}Ac
The crossover from thermal hopping to quantum tunneling is studied. We show
that the decay rate with dissipation can accurately be determined near
the crossover temperature. Besides considering the Wentzel-Kramers-Brillouin
(WKB) exponent, we also calculate contribution of the fluctuation modes around
the saddle point and give an extended account of a previous study of crossover
region. We deal with two dangerous fluctuation modes whose contribution can't
be calculated by the steepest descent method and show that higher order
couplings between the two dangerous modes need to be taken into considerations.
At last the crossover from thermal hopping to quantum tunneling in the
molecular magnet Mn_{12}Ac is studied.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figure
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