9,472 research outputs found
Heterogeneities in amorphous systems under shear
The last decade has seen major progresses in studies of elementary mechanisms
of deformation in amorphous materials. Here, we start with a review of
physically-based theories of plasticity, going back to the identification of
"shear-transformations" as early as the 70's. We show how constructive
criticism of the theoretical models permits to formulate questions concerning
the role of structural disorder, mechanical noise, and long-ranged elastic
interactions. These questions provide the necessary context to understand what
has motivated recent numerical studies. We then summarize their results, show
why they had to focus on athermal systems, and point out the outstanding
questions.Comment: Chapter of "Dynamical Heterogeneities in glasses, colloids and
granular materials", Eds.: L. Berthier, G. Biroli, J-P Bouchaud, L.
Cipelletti and W. van Saarloos (Oxford University Press, to appear), more
info at http://w3.lcvn.univ-montp2.fr/~lucacip/DH_book.ht
Hole-LO phonon interaction in InAs/GaAs quantum dots
We investigate the valence intraband transitions in p-doped self-assembled
InAs quantum dots using far-infrared magneto-optical technique with polarized
radiation. We show that a purely electronic model is unable to account for the
experimental data. We calculate the coupling between the mixed hole LO-phonon
states using the Fr\"ohlich Hamiltonian, from which we determine the polaron
states as well as the energies and oscillator strengths of the valence
intraband transitions. The good agreement between the experiments and
calculations provides strong evidence for the existence of hole-polarons and
demonstrates that the intraband magneto-optical transitions occur between
polaron states
Driven activation versus thermal activation
Activated dynamics in a glassy system undergoing steady shear deformation is
studied by numerical simulations. Our results show that the external driving
force has a strong influence on the barrier crossing rate, even though the
reaction coordinate is only weakly coupled to the nonequilibrium system. This
"driven activation" can be quantified by introducing in the Arrhenius
expression an effective temperature, which is close to the one determined from
the fluctuation-dissipation relation. This conclusion is supported by
analytical results for a simplified model system.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Accurate measurement of a 96% input coupling into a cavity using polarization tomography
Pillar microcavities are excellent light-matter interfaces providing an
electromagnetic confinement in small mode volumes with high quality factors.
They also allow the efficient injection and extraction of photons, into and
from the cavity, with potentially near-unity input and output-coupling
efficiencies. Optimizing the input and output coupling is essential, in
particular, in the development of solid-state quantum networks where artificial
atoms are manipulated with single incoming photons. Here we propose a technique
to accurately measure input and output coupling efficiencies using polarization
tomography of the light reflected by the cavity. We use the residual
birefringence of pillar microcavities to distinguish the light coupled to the
cavity from the uncoupled light: the former participates to rotating the
polarization of the reflected beam, while the latter decreases the polarization
purity. Applying this technique to a micropillar cavity, we measure a output coupling and a input coupling with unprecedented
precision.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure
Statistical mechanics of damage phenomena
This paper applies the formalism of classical, Gibbs-Boltzmann statistical
mechanics to the phenomenon of non-thermal damage. As an example, a non-thermal
fiber-bundle model with the global uniform (meanfield) load sharing is
considered. Stochastic topological behavior in the system is described in terms
of an effective temperature parameter thermalizing the system. An equation of
state and a topological analog of the energy-balance equation are obtained. The
formalism of the free energy potential is developed, and the nature of the
first order phase transition and spinodal is demonstrated.Comment: Critical point appeared to be a spinodal poin
Definition of the stimulated emission threshold in high- nanoscale lasers through phase-space reconstruction
Nanoscale lasers sustain few optical modes so that the fraction of
spontaneous emission funnelled into the useful (lasing) mode is high
(of the order of few 10) and the threshold, which traditionally
corresponds to an abrupt kink in the light in- light out curve, becomes
ill-defined. We propose an alternative definition of the threshold, based on
the dynamical response of the laser, which is valid even for lasers.
The laser dynamics is analyzed through a reconstruction of its phase-space
trajectory for pulsed excitation. Crossing the threshold brings about a change
in the shape of the trajectory and in the area contained in it. An unambiguous
definition of the threshold in terms of this change is shown theoretically and
illustrated experimentally in a photonic crystal laser
Observation of long-lived polariton states in semiconductor microcavities across the parametric threshold
The excitation spectrum around the pump-only stationary state of a polariton
optical parametric oscillator (OPO) in semiconductor microcavities is
investigated by time-resolved photoluminescence. The response to a weak pulsed
perturbation in the vicinity of the idler mode is directly related to the
lifetime of the elementary excitations. A dramatic increase of the lifetime is
observed for a pump intensity approaching and exceeding the OPO threshold. The
observations can be explained in terms of a critical slowing down of the
dynamics upon approaching the threshold and the following onset of the soft
Goldstone mode
- …