99 research outputs found
BioHyTec: Biohybride Technologien in der Hauptstadtregion – Kompetenzbildung und Aufbau einer regionalen Wertschöpfungskette
Das Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung (BMBF) startete 1999 mit dem InnoRegio-Wettbewerb eine neuartige Förderinitiative unter der Leitidee „Innovative Impulse in den Neuen Ländern“. In zahlreichen Regionen wurden Aktivitäten in Gang gesetzt, um neue Formen der Zusammenarbeit von Menschen aus den unterschiedlichsten Bereichen zu entwickeln und damit die Wertschöpfung und Wettbewerbsfähigkeit in den ostdeutschen Regionen zu erhöhen. An dieser Ausschreibung nahmen in der Anfangsphase 444 Bewerberregionen teil. Nach der ersten Jury-Sitzung im Oktober 1999 wurden 50 InnoRegios ausgewählt, in einer Entwicklungsphase ihre Kernkompetenzen herauszufiltern und tragfähige Innovationskonzepte zu erarbeiten. Mit der zweiten Jury-Sitzung im Herbst 2000 fiel der Startschuss zur Umsetzungsphase. Zur Zeit werden vom BMBF 23 InnoRegios in den Neuen Ländern gefördert
Study of the Born-Oppenheimer Approximation for Mass-Scaling of Cold Collision Properties
Asymptotic levels of the A state of the two isotopomers
and up to the dissociation limit
are investigated with a Doppler-free high resolution laser-spectroscopic
experiment in a molecular beam. The observed level structure can be reproduced
correctly only if a mass dependent correction term is introduced for the
interaction potential. The applied relative correction in the depth of the
potential is , which is in the order of magnitude expected for
corrections of the Born-Oppenheimer approximation. A similar change in ground
state potentials might lead to significant changes of mass-scaled properties
describing cold collisions like the s-wave scattering length.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figure
8E-17 fractional laser frequency instability with a long room-temperature cavity
We present a laser system based on a 48 cm long optical glass resonator. The
large size requires a sophisticated thermal control and optimized mounting
design. A self balancing mounting was essential to reliably reach sensitivities
to acceleration of below < 2E-10 /g in all directions.
Furthermore, fiber noise cancellations from a common reference point near the
laser diode to the cavity mirror and to additional user points (Sr clock and
frequency comb) are implemented. Through comparison to other cavity-stabilized
lasers and to a strontium lattice clock an instability of below 1E-16 at
averaging times from 1 s to 1000 s is revealed
Achromatic, planar Fresnel-Reflector for a Single-beam Magneto-optical Trap
We present a novel achromatic, planar, periodic mirror structure for
single-beam magneto-optical trapping and demonstrate its use in first- and
second-stage cooling and trapping for different isotopes of strontium. We refer
to it as Fresnel MOT as the structure is inspired by Fresnel lenses. By design,
it avoids many of the problems that arise for multi-color cooling using planar
structures based on diffraction gratings, which have been the dominant planar
structures to be used for single-beam trapping thus far. In addition to a
complex design process and cost-intensive fabrication, diffraction gratings
suffer from their inherent chromaticity, which causes different axial
displacements of trap volumes for the different wavelengths and necessitates
tradeoffs in their diffraction properties and achievable trap depths. In
contrast, the Fresnel reflector structure presented here is a versatile,
easy-to-manufacture device that combines achromatic beam steering with the
advantages of a planar architecture. It enables miniaturizing trapping systems
for alkaline-earth-like atoms with multiple cooling transitions as well as
multi-species trapping in the ideal tetrahedral configuration and within the
same volume above the structure. Our design presents a novel approach for the
miniaturization of cold-atom systems based on single-beam MOTs and enables the
widespread adoption of these systems.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figure
Quantum engineering for optical clocks
Atomic clocks known as optical clocks are more accurate and stable than current timekeepers. Two quantum-engineering approaches could improve the performance of optical clocks even further and extend their applications
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