612 research outputs found
Geometrical effects on the optical properties of quantum dots doped with a single magnetic atom
The emission spectra of individual self-assembled quantum dots containing a
single magnetic Mn atom differ strongly from dot to dot. The differences are
explained by the influence of the system geometry, specifically the in-plane
asymmetry of the quantum dot and the position of the Mn atom. Depending on both
these parameters, one has different characteristic emission features which
either reveal or hide the spin state of the magnetic atom. The observed
behavior in both zero field and under magnetic field can be explained
quantitatively by the interplay between the exciton-manganese exchange
interaction (dependent on the Mn position) and the anisotropic part of the
electron-hole exchange interaction (related to the asymmetry of the quantum
dot).Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, to be published in Phys. Rev. Let
2D Fourier Transform Spectroscopy of exciton-polaritons and their interactions
We investigate polariton-polariton interactions in a semiconductor
microcavity through two-dimensional Fourier transform (2DFT) spectroscopy. We
observe, in addition to the lower-lower and the upper-upper polariton
self-interaction, a lower-upper cross-interaction. This appears as separated
peaks in the on-diagonal and off-diagonal part of 2DFT spectra. Moreover, we
elucidate the role of the polariton dispersion through a fine structure in the
2DFT spectrum. Simulations, based on lower-upper polariton basis
Gross-Pitaevskii equations including both self and cross-interactions, result
in a 2DFT spectra in qualitative agreement with experiments
Soliton Instabilities and Vortex Streets Formation in a Polariton Quantum Fluid
Exciton-polaritons have been shown to be an optimal system in order to
investigate the properties of bosonic quantum fluids. We report here on the
observation of dark solitons in the wake of engineered circular obstacles and
their decay into streets of quantized vortices. Our experiments provide a
time-resolved access to the polariton phase and density, which allows for a
quantitative study of instabilities of freely evolving polaritons. The decay of
solitons is quantified and identified as an effect of disorder-induced
transverse perturbations in the dissipative polariton gas
From single particle to superfuid excitations in a dissipative polariton gas
Using angle-resolved heterodyne four-wave-mixing technique, we probe the low
momentum excitation spectrum of a coherent polariton gas. The experimental
results are well captured by the Bogoliubov transformation which describes the
transition from single particle excitations of a normal fluid to
sound-wave-like excitations of a superfluid. In a dense coherent polariton gas,
we find all the characteristics of a Bogoliubov transformation, i.e. the
positive and negative energy branch with respect to the polariton gas energy at
rest, sound-wave-like shapes for the excitations dispersion, intensity and
linewidth ratio between the two branches in agreement with the theory. The
influence of the non-equilibrium character of the polariton gas is shown by a
careful analysis of its dispersion.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Fine structure of exciton excited levels in a quantum dot with a magnetic ion
The fine structure of excited excitonic states in a quantum dot with an
embedded magnetic ion is studied theoretically and experimentally. The
developed theory takes into account the Coulomb interaction between charged
carriers, the anisotropic long-range electron-hole exchange interaction in the
zero-dimensional exciton, and the exchange interaction of the electron and the
hole with the -electrons of a Mn ion inserted inside the dot. Depending on
the relation between the quantum dot anisotropy and the exciton-Mn coupling the
photoluminescence excitation spectrum has a qualitatively different behavior.
It provides a deep insight into the spin structure of the excited excitonic
states.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figure
Reaction-diffusion dynamics: confrontation between theory and experiment in a microfluidic reactor
We confront, quantitatively, the theoretical description of the
reaction-diffusion of a second order reaction to experiment. The reaction at
work is \ca/CaGreen, and the reactor is a T-shaped microchannel, 10 m
deep, 200 m wide, and 2 cm long. The experimental measurements are
compared with the two-dimensional numerical simulation of the
reaction-diffusion equations. We find good agreement between theory and
experiment. From this study, one may propose a method of measurement of various
quantities, such as the kinetic rate of the reaction, in conditions yet
inaccessible to conventional methods
Spin-to-Orbital Angular Momentum Conversion in Semiconductor Microcavities
We experimentally demonstrate a technique for the generation of optical beams
carrying orbital angular momentum using a planar semiconductor microcavity.
Despite being isotropic systems, the transverse electric - transverse magnetic
(TE-TM) polarization splitting featured by semiconductor microcavities allows
for the conversion of the circular polarization of an incoming laser beam into
the orbital angular momentum of the transmitted light field. The process
implies the formation of topological entities, a pair of optical half-vortices,
in the intracavity field
A mean-field kinetic lattice gas model of electrochemical cells
We develop Electrochemical Mean-Field Kinetic Equations (EMFKE) to simulate
electrochemical cells. We start from a microscopic lattice-gas model with
charged particles, and build mean-field kinetic equations following the lines
of earlier work for neutral particles. We include the Poisson equation to
account for the influence of the electric field on ion migration, and
oxido-reduction processes on the electrode surfaces to allow for growth and
dissolution. We confirm the viability of our approach by simulating (i) the
electrochemical equilibrium at flat electrodes, which displays the correct
charged double-layer, (ii) the growth kinetics of one-dimensional
electrochemical cells during growth and dissolution, and (iii) electrochemical
dendrites in two dimensions.Comment: 14 pages twocolumn, 17 figure
Runtime Verification of Temporal Patterns for Dynamic Reconfigurations of Components
International audienceDynamic reconfigurations increase the availability and the reliability of component-based systems by allowing their architectures to evolve at runtime. Recently we have proposed a temporal pattern logic, called FTPL, to characterize the correct reconfigurations of component-based systems under some temporal and architectural constraints. As component-based architectures evolve at runtime, there is a need to check these FTPL constraints on the fly, even if only a partial information is expected. Firstly, given a generic component-based model, we review FTPL from a runtime verification point of view. To this end we introduce a new four-valued logic, called RV-FTPL (Runtime Verification for FTPL), characterizing the "potential" (un)satisfiability of the architectural constraints in addition to the basic FTPL semantics. Potential true and potential false values are chosen whenever an observed behaviour has not yet lead to a violation or satisfiability of the property under consideration. Secondly, we present a prototype developed to check at runtime the satisfiability of RV-FTPL formulas when reconfiguring a Fractal component-based system. The feasability of a runtime property enforcement is also shown. It consists in supervising on the fly the reconfiguration execution against desired RV-FTPL properties. The main contributions are illustrated on the example of a HTTP server architecture
Statistical Mechanics of Torque Induced Denaturation of DNA
A unifying theory of the denaturation transition of DNA, driven by
temperature T or induced by an external mechanical torque Gamma is presented.
Our model couples the hydrogen-bond opening and the untwisting of the
helicoidal molecular structure. We show that denaturation corresponds to a
first-order phase transition from B-DNA to d-DNA phases and that the
coexistence region is naturally parametrized by the degree of supercoiling
sigma. The denaturation free energy, the temperature dependence of the twist
angle, the phase diagram in the T,Gamma plane and isotherms in the sigma, Gamma
plane are calculated and show a good agreement with experimental data.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, model improve
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