5,453 research outputs found
Fermi-Edge Superfluorescence from a Quantum-Degenerate Electron-Hole Gas
We report on the observation of spontaneous bursts of coherent radiation from
a quantum-degenerate gas of nonequilibrium electron-hole pairs in semiconductor
quantum wells. Unlike typical spontaneous emission from semiconductors, which
occurs at the band edge, the observed emission occurs at the quasi-Fermi edge
of the carrier distribution. As the carriers are consumed by recombination, the
quasi-Fermi energy goes down toward the band edge, and we observe a
continuously red-shifting streak. We interpret this emission as cooperative
spontaneous recombination of electron-hole pairs, or superfluorescence, which
is enhanced by Coulomb interactions near the Fermi edge. This novel many-body
enhancement allows the magnitude of the spontaneously developed macroscopic
polarization to exceed the maximum value for ordinary superfluorescence, making
electron-hole superfluorescence even more "super" than atomic
superfluorescence.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figure
Propagating Coherent Acoustic Phonon Wavepackets in InMnAs/GaSb
We observe pronounced oscillations in the differential reflectivity of a
ferromagnetic InMnAs/GaSb heterostructure using two-color pump-probe
spectroscopy. Although originally thought to be associated with the
ferromagnetism, our studies show that the oscillations instead result from
changes in the position and frequency-dependent dielectric function due to the
generation of coherent acoustic phonons in the ferromagnetic InMnAs layer and
their subsequent propagation into the GaSb. Our theory accurately predicts the
experimentally measured oscillation period and decay time as a function of
probe wavelength.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
The dissipative effect of thermal radiation loss in high-temperature dense plasmas
A dynamical model based on the two-fluid dynamical equations with energy
generation and loss is obtained and used to investigate the self-generated
magnetic fields in high-temperature dense plasmas such as the solar core. The
self-generation of magnetic fields might be looked at as a
self-organization-type behavior of stochastic thermal radiation fields, as
expected for an open dissipative system according to Prigogine's theory of
dissipative structures.Comment: 4 pages, 1 postscript figure included; RevTeX3.0, epsf.tex neede
Stability of 1-D Excitons in Carbon Nanotubes under High Laser Excitations
Through ultrafast pump-probe spectroscopy with intense pump pulses and a wide
continuum probe, we show that interband exciton peaks in single-walled carbon
nanotubes (SWNTs) are extremely stable under high laser excitations. Estimates
of the initial densities of excitons from the excitation conditions, combined
with recent theoretical calculations of exciton Bohr radii for SWNTs, suggest
that their positions do not change at all even near the Mott density. In
addition, we found that the presence of lowest-subband excitons broadens all
absorption peaks, including those in the second-subband range, which provides a
consistent explanation for the complex spectral dependence of pump-probe
signals reported for SWNTs.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Progress in the development and application of computational methods for probabilistic protein design
Proteins exhibit a wide range of physical and chemical properties, including highly selective molecular recognition and catalysis, and are also key components in biological metabolic, catabolic, and signaling pathways. Given that proteins are well-structured and can now be rapidly synthesized, they are excellent targets for engineering of both molecular structure and biological function. Computational analysis of the protein design problem allows scientists to explore sequence space and systematically discover novel protein molecules. Nonetheless, the complexity of proteins, the subtlety of the determinants of folding, and the exponentially large number of possible sequences impede the search for peptide sequences compatible with a desired structure and function. Directed search algorithms, which identify directly a small number of sequences, have achieved some success in identifying sequences with desired structures and functions. Alternatively, one can adopt a probabilistic approach. Instead of a finite number of sequences, such calculations result in a probabilistic description of the sequence ensemble. In particular, by casting the formalism in the language of statistical mechanics, the site-specific amino acid probabilities of sequences compatible with a target structure may be readily identified. The computational probabilities are well suited for both de novo protein design of particular sequences as well as combinatorial, library-based protein engineering. The computed site-specific amino acid profile may be converted to a nucleotide base distribution to allow assembly of a partially randomized gene library. The ability to synthesize readily such degenerate oligonucleotide sequences according to the prescribed distribution is key to constructing a biased peptide library genuinely reflective of the computational design. Herein we illustrate how a standard DNA synthesizer can be used with only a slight modification to the synthesis protocol to generate a pool of degenerate DNA sequences, which encodes a predetermined amino acid distribution with high fidelity
Excitonic Dynamical Franz-Keldysh Effect
The Dynamical Franz-Keldysh Effect is exposed by exploring near-bandgap
absorption in the presence of intense THz electric fields. It bridges the gap
between the DC Franz- Keldysh effect and multi-photon absorption and competes
with the THz AC Stark Effect in shifting the energy of the excitonic resonance.
A theoretical model which includes the strong THz field non-perturbatively via
a non-equilibrium Green Functions technique is able to describe the Dynamical
Franz-Keldysh Effect in the presence of excitonic absorption.Comment: 4 pages in revtex with 5 figures included using epsf. Submitted to
Physical Review Letter
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