697 research outputs found
A dynamical model for quantum memory channels
A dynamical model for quantum channel is introduced which allows one to pass
continuously from the memoryless case to the case in which memory effects are
present. The quantum and classical communication rates of the model are defined
and explicit expression are provided in some limiting case. In this context we
introduce noise attenuation strategies where part of the signals are sacrificed
to modify the channel environment. The case of qubit channel with phase damping
noise is analyzed in details.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures; minor correction adde
Surface plasmon resonance imaging detection of silver nanoparticle-tagged immunoglobulin
This article is available open access through the publisher’s website at the link below. Copyright @ 2011 The Royal Society.The detection sensitivity of silver nanoparticle (AgNP)-tagged goat immunoglobulin G (gIgG) microarrays was investigated by studying surface plasmon resonance (SPR) images captured in the visible wavelength range with the help of a Kretchmann-configured optical coupling set-up. The functionalization of anti-gIgG molecules on the AgNP surface was studied using transmission electron microscopy, photon correlation measurements and UV–visible absorption spectroscopy. A value of 1.3 × 107 M−1 was obtained for the antibody–antigen binding constant by monitoring the binding events at a particular resonance wavelength. The detection limit of this SPR imaging instrument is 6.66 nM of gIgG achieved through signal enhancement by a factor of larger than 4 owing to nanoparticle tagging with the antibody.The European Commissio
From Mining to Post-Mining: The Sustainable Development Strategy of the German Hard Coal Mining Industry
By the end of the 1950s, the German coal mining industry produced 150 million tons of hard coal per year in 170 collieries with 600,000 employees. At that time, 70% of the primary energy demand of the Federal Republic of Germany was covered by domestic coal. Since the advance of oil, later of natural gas, in the world energy market and with the growth of world coal trade, domestic coal stood under a long-term restructuring pressure. This decision required a new strategy for the coal mining industry. Now German coal mining will be strictly finalized and will be prepared for the post-mining era. Within a sustainability strategy the long-term impacts of mining activities before and after the mine closures concerning the environmental, economic and social dimensions will be analyzed systematically and forward-looking
Broad-band polarization-independent total absorption of electromagnetic waves by an overdense plasma
We have shown both experimentally and theoretically that
polarization-independent broad-band absorption of electromagnetic waves by an
overdense plasma, caused by surface plasmon-polaritons (SPP) excitation, can be
achieved due to combination of two factors: a non-zero angle of incidence and a
two-dimensional circular diffraction grating placed at a properly chosen
distance in front of the plasma boundary. Direct detection of SPP has been
achieved for the first time using a miniature antenna imbedded in the plasma.Comment: considerably broadened versio
Otto-coupled surface plasmons in a liquid crystal cell
Copyright © 2009 American Institute of Physics. This article may be downloaded for personal use only. Any other use requires prior permission of the author and the American Institute of Physics. The following article appeared in Applied Physics Letters 95 (2009) and may be found at http://link.aip.org/link/?APPLAB/95/171102/1Surface plasmons on silver in the visible domain are excited using a several micron thick layer of liquid crystal as the optical tunnel barrier. This thickness is possible when the orientation of the director in the liquid crystal varies from homeotropic at the entrance surface (against the coupling prism) to homogeneous on the thick silver layer at the other side of the cell, with the director tilting in a plane normal to the plane of incidence. This geometry also allows the excitation of guided modes, which mixes with the surface plasmon resonance. Both types of mode are then explored as a function of applied voltage
Lucky Cars and the Quicksort Algorithm
Quicksort is a classical divide-and-conquer sorting algorithm. It is a
comparison sort that makes an average of comparisons on an
array of size ordered uniformly at random, where is the th harmonic number. Therefore, it makes
comparisons to sort all possible orderings of
the array. In this article, we prove that this count also enumerates the
parking preference lists of cars parking on a one-way street with
parking spots resulting in exactly lucky cars (i.e., cars that park in
their preferred spot). For , both counts satisfy the second order
recurrence relation with .Comment: 8 pages, and 2 figures, to appear in The American Mathematical
Monthl
‘Should We Be Doing It, Should We Not Be Doing It, Who Could Be Harmed?’
Many science educators have argued in favour of including socioscientific issues (SSI) in general, and ethical issues in particular, in school science. However, there have been a number of objections to this proposal, and it is widely acknowledged that such teaching places additional demands on science teachers. This study examined the curricula, textbooks and views of both student teachers and established teachers in England and in Germany regarding the teaching of ethical issues in secondary school science, particularly the ethical issues surrounding animal tests. Analysis of the curriculum documents for secondary or upper secondary school science showed that in both countries, ethical considerations feature strongly. However, in both countries, the overall treatments in the school textbooks of the ethical issues of animal testing were generally ‘thin’, and little opportunity was given for students to consider different ethical frameworks. The teacher and student teacher interviews revealed that interviewees generally gave ethical issues less emphasis than fundamental science. A number of interviewees referred to a lack of appropriate teaching material, and many of them also had concerns that such teaching could give rise to classroom management issues or that they might be accused of indoctrinating their students. Given the increasing acknowledgement of the need for school science to address so-called wicked socioscientific problems, these findings are a concern. We end with recommendations for curricula, for textbooks and for teacher education
Sensing using differential surface plasmon ellipsometry
Copyright © 2004 American Institute of Physics. This article may be downloaded for personal use only. Any other use requires prior permission of the author and the American Institute of Physics. The following article appeared in Journal of Applied Physics 96 (2004) and may be found at http://link.aip.org/link/?JAPIAU/96/3004/1In this work a differential ellipsometric method utilizing surface plasmons (SPs) for monitoring refractive index changes, which could be used in chemical and biological sensors, is presented. The method is based upon determining the azimuth of elliptically polarized light reflected from a Kretschmann SP system, resulting from linearly polarized light containing both p and s components incident upon it. The sensitivity of this azimuth to the refractive index of a dielectric on the nonprism side of the metal film is demonstrated both experimentally and theoretically. The smallest refractive index change which is resolvable is of the order of 10–7 refractive index units, although it is believed that this could be improved upon were it not for experimental constraints due to atmospheric changes and vibrations. The method requires the Kretschmann configuration to be oriented at a fixed angle, and the SP to be excited at a fixed wavelength. With no moving parts this method would be particularly robust from an application point of view
The coupling of microwave radiation to surface plasmon polaritons and guided modes via dielectric gratings
Copyright © 2000 American Institute of Physics. This article may be downloaded for personal use only. Any other use requires prior permission of the author and the American Institute of Physics. The following article appeared in Journal of Applied Physics 87 (2000) and may be found at http://link.aip.org/link/?JAPIAU/87/2677/1It is shown that an absorbing dielectric layer, sinusoidally modulated in height, on top of a planar metal substrate, may be used to provide coupling between both s- and p-polarized incident microwave photons and surface plasmon polaritons, which propagate along the metal–dielectric interface. The study is carried out using paraffin wax as the dielectric material on an aluminum-alloy plate and the wax is sufficiently thick such that it may also support a guided mode. Energy reradiated from these excited modes into diffracted orders is recorded by monitoring the specular beam reflectivity as a function of wavelength (7.5<λ0<11.3 mm) and azimuthal angle of incidence (0°<φ<90°). The azimuthal-angle-dependent reflectivity scans are fitted using a multilayer, multishape differential formalism to model conical diffraction with a single set of parameters describing the grating profile, and the permittivity and thickness of the wax layer
Forty-Four Pass Fibre Optic Loop for Improving the Sensitivity of Surface Plasmon Resonance Sensors
A forty-four pass fibre optic surface plasmon resonance sensor that enhances
detection sensitivity according to the number of passes is demonstrated for the
first time. The technique employs a fibre optic recirculation loop that passes
the detection spot forty- four times, thus enhancing sensitivity by a factor of
forty-four. Presently, the total number of passes is limited by the onset of
lasing action of the recirculation loop. This technique offers a significant
sensitivity improvement for various types of plasmon resonance sensors that may
be used in chemical and biomolecule detections.Comment: Submitted for publication; patent disclosure submitte
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