72 research outputs found
Model-independent measurements of the sodium magneto-optical trap's excited-state population
We present model-independent measurements of the excited-state population of
atoms in a sodium (Na) magneto-optical trap (MOT) using a hybrid ion-neutral
trap composed of a MOT and a linear Paul trap (LPT). We photoionize excited Na
atoms trapped in the MOT and use two independent methods to measure the
resulting ions: directly by trapping them in our LPT, and indirectly by
monitoring changes in MOT fluorescence. By measuring the ionization rate via
these two independent methods, we have enough information to directly determine
the population of MOT atoms in the excited-state. The resulting measurement
reveals that there is a range of trapping-laser intensities where the
excited-state population of atoms in our MOT follows the standard two-level
model intensity-dependence. However, an experimentally determined effective
saturation intensity must be used instead of the theoretically predicted value
from the two-level model. We measured the effective saturation intensity to be
for the type-I Na MOT and
for the type-II Na MOT,
approximately 1.7 and 3.6 times the theoretical estimate, respectively. Lastly,
at large trapping-laser intensities, our experiment reveals a clear departure
from the two-level model at a critical intensity that we believe is due to a
state-mixing effect, whose critical intensity can be determined by a simple
power broadening model.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figure
Garotas de loja, história social e teoria social [Shop Girls, Social History and Social Theory]
Shop workers, most of them women, have made up a significant proportion of Britain’s labour force since the 1850s but we still know relatively little about their history. This article argues that there has been a systematic neglect of one of the largest sectors of female employment by historians and investigates why this might be. It suggests that this neglect is connected to framings of work that have overlooked the service sector as a whole as well as to a continuing unease with the consumer society’s transformation of social life. One element of that transformation was the rise of new forms of aesthetic, emotional and sexualised labour. Certain kinds of ‘shop girls’ embodied these in spectacular fashion. As a result, they became enduring icons of mass consumption, simultaneously dismissed as passive cultural dupes or punished as powerful agents of cultural destruction. This article interweaves the social history of everyday shop workers with shifting representations of the ‘shop girl’, from Victorian music hall parodies, through modernist social theory, to the bizarre bombing of the Biba boutique in London by the Angry Brigade on May Day 1971. It concludes that progressive historians have much to gain by reclaiming these workers and the service economy that they helped create
A simple, graphic procedure for authentication of commercial fats and oil based on fatty acid compositions in codex standards
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