561 research outputs found
Stimulated emission does not radiate in a pure dipole pattern
Stimulated Emission (StE) remains relatively unused as an image-forming
signal despite having potential advantages over fluorescence in speed,
coherence, and ultimately resolution. Several ideas for the radiation pattern
and directionality of StE remain prevalent, namely whether a single molecule
would radiate StE itself in a pure dipole pattern, or whether its emission
direction depends on the driving field. Previous StE imaging has been carried
out in transmission, which would collect signal either way. Here, we introduce
the StE driving field (the probe) at an angle, using total internal reflection
to avoid incident probe light and its specular reflections in our detection
path. In this non-collinear detection configuration which also collects some
fluorescence from the sample, we observe fluorescence depletion even in the
spectral window where an increase in detected signal from StE would be expected
if StE radiated like a simple classical dipole. Because simultaneous direct
measurement of the fluorescence represents a calibration of the potential size
of StE were it spatially patterned like a classical dipole emitter, our study
clarifies a critical characteristic of StE for optimal microscope design,
optical cooling, and applications using small arrays of emitters
Photoluminescence dispersion as a probe of structural inhomogeneity in silica
We report time-resolved photoluminescence spectra of point defects in
amorphous silicon dioxide (silica), in particular the decay kinetics of the
emission signals of extrinsic Oxygen Deficient Centres of the second type from
singlet and directly-excited triplet states are measured and used as a probe of
structural inhomogeneity. Luminescence activity in sapphire
(-AlO) is studied as well and used as a model system to compare
the optical properties of defects in silica with those of defects embedded in a
crystalline matrix. Only for defects in silica, we observe a variation of the
decay lifetimes with emission energy and a time dependence of the first moment
of the emission bands. These features are analyzed within a theoretical model
with explicit hypothesis about the effect introduced by the disorder of
vitreous systems. Separate estimations of the homogenous and inhomogeneous
contributions to the measured emission linewidth are obtained: it is found that
inhomogeneous effects strongly condition both the triplet and singlet
luminescence activities of oxygen deficient centres in silica, although the
degree of inhomogeneity of the triplet emission turns out to be lower than that
of the singlet emission. Inhomogeneous effects appear to be negligible in
sapphire
Strongly focused light beams interacting with single atoms in free space
We construct 3-D solutions of Maxwell's equations that describe Gaussian
light beams focused by a strong lens. We investigate the interaction of such
beams with single atoms in free space and the interplay between angular and
quantum properties of the scattered radiation. We compare the exact results
with those obtained with paraxial light beams and from a standard input-output
formalism. We put our results in the context of quantum information processing
with single atoms.Comment: 9 pages, 9 figure
Optical detection of single non-absorbing molecules using the surface plasmon of a gold nanorod
Current optical detection schemes for single molecules require light
absorption, either to produce fluorescence or direct absorption signals. This
severely limits the range of molecules that can be detected, because most
molecules are purely refractive. Metal nanoparticles or dielectric resonators
detect non-absorbing molecules by a resonance shift in response to a local
perturbation of the refractive index, but neither has reached single-protein
sensitivity. The most sensitive plasmon sensors to date detect single molecules
only when the plasmon shift is amplified by a highly polarizable label or by a
localized precipitation reaction on the particle's surface. Without
amplification, the sensitivity only allows for the statistical detection of
single molecules. Here we demonstrate plasmonic detection of single molecules
in realtime, without the need for labeling or amplification. We monitor the
plasmon resonance of a single gold nanorod with a sensitive photothermal assay
and achieve a ~ 700-fold increase in sensitivity compared to state-of-the-art
plasmon sensors. We find that the sensitivity of the sensor is intrinsically
limited due to spectral diffusion of the SPR. We believe this is the first
optical technique that detects single molecules purely by their refractive
index, without any need for photon absorption by the molecule. The small size,
bio-compatibility and straightforward surface chemistry of gold nanorods may
open the way to the selective and local detection of purely refractive proteins
in live cells
Nonclassical Interference Effects In The Radiation From Coherently Driven Uncorrelated Atoms
We demonstrate the existence of new nonclassical correlations in the
radiation of two atoms, which are coherently driven by a continuous laser
source. The photon-photon-correlations of the fluorescence light show a spatial
interferene pattern not present in a classical treatment. A feature of the new
phenomenon is, that bunched and antibunched light is emitted in different
spatial directions. The calculations are performed analytically. It is pointed
out, that the correlations are induced by state reduction due to the
measurement process when the detection of the photons does not distinguish
between the atoms. It is interesting to note, that the phenomena show up even
without any interatomic interaction.Comment: 4 pages, 6 Figure
Formation Mechanism of Maghemite Nanoflowers Synthesized by a Polyol-Mediated Process
Magnetic nanoparticles are being developed as structural and functional materials for use in diverse areas, including biomedical applications. Here, we report the synthesis of maghemite (Âż-Fe2O3) nanoparticles with distinct morphologies: single-core and multicore, including hollow spheres and nanoflowers, prepared by the polyol process. We have used sodium acetate to control the nucleation and assembly process to obtain the different particle morphologies. Moreover, from samples obtained at different time steps during the synthesis, we have elucidated the formation mechanism of the nanoflowers: the initial phases of the reaction present a lepidocrocite (Âż-FeOOH) structure, which suffers a fast dehydroxylation, transforming to an intermediate "undescribed" phase, possibly a partly dehydroxylated lepidocrocite, which after some incubation time evolves to maghemite nanoflowers. Once the nanoflowers have been formed, a crystallization process takes place, where the Âż-Fe2O3 crystallites within the nanoflowers grow in size (from ~11 to 23 nm), but the particle size of the flower remains essentially unchanged (~60 nm). Samples with different morphologies were coated with citric acid and their heating capacity in an alternating magnetic field was evaluated. We observe that nanoflowers with large cores (23 nm, controlled by annealing) densely packed (tuned by low NaAc concentration) offer 5 times enhanced heating capacity compared to that of the nanoflowers with smaller core sizes (15 nm), 4 times enhanced heating effect compared to that of the hollow spheres, and 1.5 times enhanced heating effect compared to that of single-core nanoparticles (36 nm) used in this work
Photon Statistics; Nonlinear Spectroscopy of Single Quantum Systems
A unified description of multitime correlation functions, nonlinear response
functions, and quantum measurements is developed using a common generating
function which allows a direct comparison of their information content. A
general formal expression for photon counting statistics from single quantum
objects is derived in terms of Liouville space correlation functions of the
material system by making a single assumption that spontaneous emission is
described by a master equation
Disorder and Funneling Effects on Exciton Migration in Tree-Like Dendrimers
The center-bound excitonic diffusion on dendrimers subjected to several types
of non-homogeneous funneling potentials, is considered. We first study the
mean-first passage time (MFPT) for diffusion in a linear potential with
different types of correlated and uncorrelated random perturbations. Increasing
the funneling force, there is a transition from a phase in which the MFPT grows
exponentially with the number of generations , to one in which it does so
linearly. Overall the disorder slows down the diffusion, but the effect is much
more pronounced in the exponential compared to the linear phase. When the
disorder gives rise to uncorrelated random forces there is, in addition, a
transition as the temperature is lowered. This is a transition from a
high- regime in which all paths contribute to the MFPT to a low- regime
in which only a few of them do. We further explore the funneling within a
realistic non-linear potential for extended dendrimers in which the dependence
of the lowest excitonic energy level on the segment length was derived using
the Time-Dependent Hatree-Fock approximation. Under this potential the MFPT
grows initially linearly with but crosses-over, beyond a molecular-specific
and -dependent optimal size, to an exponential increase. Finally we consider
geometrical disorder in the form of a small concentration of long connections
as in the {\it small world} model. Beyond a critical concentration of
connections the MFPT decreases significantly and it changes to a power-law or
to a logarithmic scaling with , depending on the strength of the funneling
force.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figure
Spatial Regulation and the Rate of Signal Transduction Activation
Of the many important signaling events that take place on the surface of a mammalian cell, activation of signal transduction pathways via interactions of cell surface receptors is one of the most important. Evidence suggests that cell surface proteins are not as freely diffusible as implied by the classic fluid mosaic model and that their confinement to membrane domains is regulated. It is unknown whether these dynamic localization mechanisms function to enhance signal transduction activation rate or to minimize cross talk among pathways that share common intermediates. To determine which of these two possibilities is more likely, we derive an explicit equation for the rate at which cell surface membrane proteins interact based on a Brownian motion model in the presence of endocytosis and exocytosis. We find that in the absence of any diffusion constraints, cell surface protein interaction rate is extremely high relative to cytoplasmic protein interaction rate even in a large mammalian cell with a receptor abundance of a mere two hundred molecules. Since a larger number of downstream signaling events needs to take place, each occurring at a much slower rate than the initial activation via association of cell surface proteins, we conclude that the role of co-localization is most likely that of cross-talk reduction rather than coupling efficiency enhancement
Interferometric signatures of single molecules
We built an, interferometer where one of the two slits of a classical Young's setup is replaced by a single molecule embedded in a solid matrix. This enabled direct measurement of the first order coherence of the 0-0 single-molecule emission, which at high excitation powers proves to be split in coherent and incoherent parts. We demonstrate an order of magnitude higher precision in axial localization of single molecules in comparison with that of confocal microscopy. These experiments open a possibility for single-molecule holography. Detection of single molecules with low luminescence quantum yields could be another application of this technique
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