565 research outputs found

    Strong Optical-Mechanical Coupling in a Vertical GaAs/AlAs Microcavity for Subterahertz Phonons and Near-Infrared Light

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    We show that distributed Bragg reflector GaAs/AlAs vertical cavities designed to confine photons are automatically optimal to confine phonons of the same wavelength, strongly enhancing their interaction. We study the impulsive generation of intense coherent and monochromatic acoustic phonons by following the time evolution of the elastic strain in picosecond-laser experiments. Efficient optical detection is assured by the strong phonon backaction on the high-Q optical cavity mode. Large optomechanical factors are reported (similar to THz/nm range). Pillar cavities based in these structures are predicted to display picogram effective masses, almost perfect sound extraction, and threshold powers for the stimulated emission of phonons in the range mu W-mW, opening the way for the demonstration of phonon "lasing" by parametric instability in these devices.Fil: Fainstein, Alejandro. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas; Argentina. Comisión Nacional de Energía Atómica. Gerencia del Area de Investigación y Aplicaciones No Nucleares. Gerencia de Física (Centro Atómico Bariloche); Argentina. Comisión Nacional de Energía Atómica. Gerencia del Area de Energía Nuclear. Instituto Balseiro; ArgentinaFil: Lanzillotti Kimura, N. D.. Comisión Nacional de Energía Atómica. Gerencia del Area de Investigación y Aplicaciones No Nucleares. Gerencia de Física (Centro Atómico Bariloche); Argentina. Comisión Nacional de Energía Atómica. Gerencia del Area de Energía Nuclear. Instituto Balseiro; ArgentinaFil: Jusserand, B.. Universite de Paris Vi. Institut Des Nanosciences de Paris; Francia. Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique; Francia. Universite Pierre et Marie Curie; FranciaFil: Perrin, B.. Universite de Paris Vi. Institut Des Nanosciences de Paris; Franci

    Phonon Bloch oscillations in acoustic-cavity structures

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    We describe a semiconductor multilayer structure based in acoustic phonon cavities and achievable with MBE technology, designed to display acoustic phonon Bloch oscillations. We show that forward and backscattering Raman spectra give a direct measure of the created phononic Wannier-Stark ladder. We also discuss the use of femtosecond laser impulsions for the generation and direct probe of the induced phonon Bloch oscillations. We propose a gedanken experiment based in an integrated phonon source-structure-detector device, and we present calculations of pump and probe time dependent optical reflectivity that evidence temporal beatings in agreement with the Wannier-Stark ladder energy splitting.Comment: PDF file including 4 figure

    Sub-Terahertz Monochromatic Transduction with Semiconductor Acoustic Nanodevices

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    We demonstrate semiconductor superlattices or nanocavities as narrow band acoustic transducers in the sub-terahertz range. Using picosecond ultrasonics experiments in the transmission geometry with pump and probe incident on opposite sides of the thick substrate, phonon generation and detection processes are fully decoupled. Generating with the semiconductor device and probing on the metal, we show that both superlattices and nanocavities generate spectrally narrow wavepackets of coherent phonons with frequencies in the vicinity of the zone center and time durations in the nanosecond range, qualitatively different from picosecond broadband pulses usually involved in picosecond acoustics with metal generators. Generating in the metal and probing on the nanoacoustic device, we furthermore evidence that both nanostructured semiconductor devices may be used as very sensitive and spectrally selective detectors

    Uncoupled excitons in semiconductor microcavities detected in resonant Raman scattering

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    We present an outgoing resonant Raman-scattering study of a GaAs/AlGaAs based microcavity embedded in a p-i-n junction. The p-i-n junction allows the vertical electric field to be varied, permitting control of exciton-photon detuning and quenching of photoluminescence which otherwise obscures the inelastic light scattering signals. Peaks corresponding to the upper and lower polariton branches are observed in the resonant Raman cross sections, along with a third peak at the energy of uncoupled excitons. This third peak, attributed to disorder activated Raman scattering, provides clear evidence for the existence of uncoupled exciton reservoir states in microcavities in the strong-coupling regime

    Optical cavity mode dynamics and coherent phonon generation in high-Q micropillar resonators

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    International audienceWe study the temporal dynamics of photoexcited carriers in distributed Bragg reflector based semiconductor micropillars at room temperature. Their influence on the process of coherent phonon generation and detection is analyzed by means of pump-probe microscopy. The dependence of the measured mechanical signatures on laser-cavity detuning is explained through a model that accounts for the varying light-cavity coupling existent during the ultrashort times that pump and probe pulses dwell within the structure. To do so, we first explain the optical mode dynamics with an electron-hole diffusion model that accounts for the escape of carriers from the probed area, as well as their recombination in the bulk and on the free surfaces. We thus show that the latter is the most influential factor for pillars below ∼10μm, where 3D confinement of the optical and mechanical fields becomes relevant

    Post-Prior discrepancies in CDW-EIS calculations for ion impact ionization fully differential cross sections

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    In this work we present fully differential cross sections (FDCSs) calculations using post and prior version of CDW--EIS theory for helium single ionization by 100 MeV C6+^{6+} amu1^{-1} and 3.6 MeV amu1^{-1} Au24+^{24+} and Au53+^{53+} ions. We performed our calculations for different momentum transfer and ejected electron energies. The influence of internuclear potential on the ejected electron spectra is taken into account in all cases. We compare our calculations with absolute experimental measurements. It is shown that prior version calculations give better agreement with experiments in almost all studied cases.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figure

    A Polymerase-chain-reaction Assay for the Specific Identification of Transcripts Encoded by Individual Carcinoembryonic Antigen (CEA)-gene-family Members

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    Carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) is a tumor marker that belongs to a family of closely related molecules with variable expression patterns. We have developed sets of oligonucleotide primers for the specific amplification of transcripts from individual CEA-family members using the reverse transcriptase/ polymerase chain reaction (RT/PCR). Specific primer sets were designed for CEA, non-specific cross-reacting antigen (NCA), biliary glycoprotein (BGP), carcinoembryonic antigen gene-family members 1, 6 and 7 (CGMI, CGM6 and CGM7), and one set for all pregnancy-specific glycoprotein (PSG) transcripts. Primers were first tested for their specificity against individual cDNA clones and product-hybridization with internal, transcript-specific oligonucleotides. Total RNA from 12 brain and 63 gynecological tumors were then tested for expression of CEA-related transcripts. None were found in tumors located in the brain, including various mesenchymal and neuro-epithelial tumors. CEA and NCA transcripts were, however, present in an adenocarcinoma located in the nasal sinuses. In ovarian mucinous adenocarcinomas, we always found co-expression of CEA and NCA transcripts, and occasionally BGP mRNA. CEA-related transcripts were also found in some serous, endometrioid and clear-cell ovarian carcinomas. CEA, NCA and BGP transcripts were present in endometrial carcinomas of the uterus and cervical carcinomas, whereas uterine leiomyomas were completely negative. No transcripts were found from CGM 1, CGM6, CGM7 or from PSG genes in any of the tumors tested. The PCR data were compared with immunohistochemical investigations of ovarian tumors at the protein level using CEA (26/3/13)-, NCA-50/90 (9A6FR) and NCA-95 (80H3)-specific monoclonal antibodies

    Scaling rules in optomechanical semiconductor micropillars

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    International audienceSemiconductor pillar microcavities have recently emerged as a promising optomechanical platform in the unprecedented 20-GHz frequency range. Currently established models for the mechanical behavior of micropillars, however, rely on complete numerical simulations or semianalytical approaches, which makes their application to experiments notoriously difficult. Here we overcome this challenge with an effective model by reducing the full, hybridized mechanical mode picture of a micropillar to an approach that captures the observed global trends. We show experimentally the validity of this approach by studying the lateral size dependence of the frequency, amplitude, and lifetime of the mechanical modes of square-section pillar microcavities, using room-temperature pump-probe microscopy. General scaling rules for these quantities are found and explained through simple phenomenological models of the physical phenomena involved. We show that the energy shift ω m of the modes due to confinement is dependent on the inverse of their frequency ω 0 and lateral size L (ω m ∝ 1/ω 0 L 2) and that the mode lifetime τ is linear with pillar size and inversely proportional to their frequency (τ ∝ L/ω 0). The mode amplitude is in turn inversely proportional to the lateral size of the considered resonators. This is related to the dependence of the optomechanical coupling rate (g 0 ∝ 1/L) with the spatial extent of the confined electromagnetic and mechanical fields. Using a numerical model based on the finite-element method, we determine the magnitude and size dependence of g 0 and, by combining the results with the experimental data, we discuss the attainable single-photon cooperativity in these systems. The effective models proposed and the scaling rules found constitute an important tool in micropillar optomechanics and in the future development of more complex micropillar based devices
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