4,809 research outputs found
Spectroscopic studies of fractal aggregates of silver nanospheres undergoing local restructuring
We present an experimental spectroscopic study of large random colloidal
aggregates of silver nanoparticles undergoing local restructuring. We argue
that such well-known phenomena as strong fluctuation of local electromagnetic
fields, appearance of "hot spots" and enhancement of nonlinear optical
responses depend on the local structure on the scales of several nanosphere
diameters, rather that the large-scale fractal geometry of the sample.Comment: 3.5 pages, submitted to J. Chem. Phy
Controlling Silver Nanoparticle Size and Morphology with Photostimulated Synthesis
Photo-induced synthesis and control over the size and shape of colloidal
silver nanoparticles is investigated in contrast to photo-stimulated
aggregation of small nanoparticles into large fractal-type structures. The
feasibility of light-driven nanoengineering which enables manipulation of the
sizes and shapes of the isolated nanoparticles is studied by varying the amount
and type of the stabilizing agent and the type of optical irradiation.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures, 11 image
Local anisotropy and giant enhancement of local electromagnetic fields in fractal aggregates of metal nanoparticles
We have shown within the quasistatic approximation that the giant
fluctuations of local electromagnetic field in random fractal aggregates of
silver nanospheres are strongly correlated with a local anisotropy factor S
which is defined in this paper. The latter is a purely geometrical parameter
which characterizes the deviation of local environment of a given nanosphere in
an aggregate from spherical symmetry. Therefore, it is possible to predict the
sites with anomalously large local fields in an aggregate without explicitly
solving the electromagnetic problem. We have also demonstrated that the average
(over nanospheres) value of S does not depend noticeably on the fractal
dimension D, except when D approaches the trivial limit D=3. In this case, as
one can expect, the average local environment becomes spherically symmetrical
and S approaches zero. This corresponds to the well-known fact that in trivial
aggregates fluctuations of local electromagnetic fields are much weaker than in
fractal aggregates. Thus, we find that, within the quasistatics, the
large-scale geometry does not have a significant impact on local
electromagnetic responses in nanoaggregates in a wide range of fractal
dimensions. However, this prediction is expected to be not correct in
aggregates which are sufficiently large for the intermediate- and
radiation-zone interaction of individual nanospheres to become important.Comment: 9 pages 9 figures. No revisions from previous version; only figure
layout is change
Low-rate accretion onto isolated stellar mass black holes
Magnetic field behaviour in a spherically-symmetric accretion flow for
parameters typical of single black holes in the Galaxy is discussed. It is
shown that in the majority of Galaxy volume, accretion onto single stellar-mass
black holes will be spherical and have a low accretion rate ( of the Eddington rate). An analysis of plasma internal energy growth
during the infall is performed. Adiabatic heating of collisionless accretion
flow due to magnetic adiabatic invariant conservation is 25% more efficient
than in the standard non-magnetized gas case. It is shown that magnetic field
line reconnections in discrete current sheets lead to significant nonthermal
electron component formation. In a framework of quasi-diffusion acceleration,
the "energy-radius" electron distribution is computed and the function
describing the shape of synchrotron radiation spectrum is constructed. It is
shown that nonthermal electron emission leads to formation of a hard (UV,
X-ray, up to gamma), highly variable spectral component in addition to the
standard synchrotron optical component first derived by Shvartsman generated by
thermal electrons in the magnetic field of accretion flow. For typical
interstellar medium parameters, a black hole at 100 pc distance will be a
16-25 optical source coinciding with the highly variable bright X-ray
counterpart, while the variable component of optical emission will be about
18-27. The typical time scale of the variability is sec,
with relative flare amplitudes of 0.2-6% in various spectral bands. Possible
applications of these results to the problem of search for single black holes
are discussed.Comment: 16 pages, 13 figures. A&A, 440, 22
Semiorthogonal decompositions of derived categories of equivariant coherent sheaves
Let X be an algebraic variety with an action of an algebraic group G. Suppose
X has a full exceptional collection of sheaves, and these sheaves are invariant
under the action of the group. We construct a semiorthogonal decomposition of
bounded derived category of G-equivariant coherent sheaves on X into
components, equivalent to derived categories of twisted representations of the
group. If the group is finite or reductive over the algebraically closed field
of zero characteristic, this gives a full exceptional collection in the derived
equivariant category. We apply our results to particular varieties such as
projective spaces, quadrics, Grassmanians and Del Pezzo surfaces.Comment: 28 pages, uses XY-pi
Evaluation of scientific CMOS sensors for sky survey applications
Scientific CMOS image sensors are a modern alternative for a typical CCD
detectors, as they offer both low read-out noise, large sensitive area, and
high frame rates. All these makes them promising devices for a modern
wide-field sky surveys. However, the peculiarities of CMOS technology have to
be properly taken into account when analyzing the data. In order to
characterize these, we performed an extensive laboratory testing of Andor
Marana sCMOS camera. Here we report its results, especially on the temporal
stability and linearity, and compare it to the previous versions of Andor sCMOS
cameras. We also present the results of an on-sky testing of this sensor
connected to a wide-field lens, and discuss its applications for an
astronomical sky surveys.Comment: Accepted to Astronomische Nachrichte
Soliton dual comb in crystalline microresonators
We present a novel compact dual-comb source based on a monolithic optical
crystalline MgF multi-resonator stack. The coherent soliton combs generated
in two microresonators of the stack with the repetition rate of 12.1 GHz and
difference of 1.62 MHz provided after heterodyning a 300 MHz wide
radio-frequency comb. Analogous system can be used for dual-comb spectroscopy,
coherent LIDAR applications and massively parallel optical communications.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
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