5,395 research outputs found
Coplanar stripline antenna design for optically detected magnetic resonance on semiconductor quantum dots
We report on the development and testing of a coplanar stripline antenna that
is designed for integration in a magneto-photoluminescence experiment to allow
coherent control of individual electron spins confined in single self-assembled
semiconductor quantum dots. We discuss the design criteria for such a structure
which is multi-functional in the sense that it serves not only as microwave
delivery but also as electrical top gate and shadow mask for the single quantum
dot spectroscopy. We present test measurements on hydrogenated amorphous
silicon, demonstrating electrically detected magnetic resonance using the
in-plane component of the oscillating magnetic field created by the coplanar
stripline antenna necessary due to the particular geometry of the quantum dot
spectroscopy. From reference measurements using a commercial electron spin
resonance setup in combination with finite element calculations simulating the
field distribution in the structure, we obtain an average magnetic field of
~0.2mT at the position where the quantum dots would be integrated into the
device. The corresponding pi-pulse time of ~0.3us fully meets the requirements
set by the high sensitivity optical spin read-out scheme developed for the
quantum dot
Interpretation of Nuclear Quadrupole Resonance Spectra in Doped LaCuO
The nuclear quadrupole resonance (NQR) spectrum of strontium doped
LaCuO surprisingly resembles the NQR spectrum of LaCuO doped
with excess oxygen, both spectra being dominated by a main peak and one
principal satellite peak at similar frequencies. Using first-principles cluster
calculations this is investigated here by calculating the electric field
gradient (EFG) at the central copper site of the cluster after replacing a
lanthanum atom in the cluster with a strontium atom or adding an interstitial
oxygen to the cluster. In each case the EFG was increased by approximately 10 %
leading unexpectedly to the explanation that the NQR spectra are only
accidentally similar and the origins are quite different. Additionally the
widths of the peaks in the NQR spectra are explained by the different EFG of
copper centres remote from the impurity. A model, based on holes moving rapidly
across the planar oxygen atoms, is proposed to explain the observed increase in
frequency of both the main and satellite peaks in the NQR spectrum as the
doping concentration is increased
Second-Order Nonlinear Mixing of Two Modes in a Planar Photonic Crystal Microcavity
Polarization-resolved second-harmonic spectra are obtained from the resonant
modes of a two-dimensional planar photonic crystal microcavity patterned in a
free-standing InP slab. The photonic crystal microcavity is comprised of a
single missing-hole defect in a hexagonal photonic crystal host formed with
elliptically-shaped holes. The cavity supports two orthogonally-polarized
resonant modes split by 60 wavenumbers. Sum-frequency data are reported from
the nonlinear interaction of the two coherently excited modes, and the
polarization dependence is explained in terms of the nonlinear susceptibility
tensor of the host InP.Comment: 7 pages, 8 Postscript figures, to be presented at Photonics West Jan.
2
Detection Of Brugia Malayi And Brugia Pahangi Parasites By Biotinlabeled Dna Probes
Morphologically, the larvae of Brugian parasites are difficult to differentiate by conventional methods. Recently, radioactive labeled DNA probes2'3 have been developed to distinguish the larvae of these parasites. However, these probes have a short shelf-life and are hazardous to the users. Two oligonucleotide DNA probes have been tested, one is specific for B.malayi and the other specific for B.pahangi. They were each labeled with Biotin in three different ways by using : a one-tailed 30mer biotinylated uridine residues, a two-tailed 30mer biotinylated uridine-thymidine residues. The dot blot assays were tested at various temperatures (30°C-80°C) using different concentrations of parasite DNAs (12.8ng-0.1ng). Our preliminary results indicated that the sensitivity and specificity of the biotinylated DNA probes, with a two-tailed 45mer biotinylated residues, were highly acceptable for field use
Locally Preferred Structure and Frustration in Glassforming Liquids: A Clue to Polyamorphism?
We propose that the concept of liquids characterized by a given locally
preferred structure (LPS) could help in understanding the observed phenomenon
of polyamorphism. ``True polyamorphism'' would involve the competition between
two (or more) distinct LPS, one favored at low pressure because of its low
energy and one favored at high pressure because of its small specific volume,
as in tetrahedrally coordinated systems. ``Apparent polyamorphism'' could be
associated with the existence of a poorly crystallized defect-ordered phase
with a large unit cell and small crystallites, which may be illustrated by the
metastable glacial phase of the fragile glassformer triphenylphosphite; the
apparent polyamorphism might result from structural frustration, i. e., a
competition between the tendency to extend the LPS and a global constraint that
prevents tiling of the whole space by the LPS.Comment: 11, 6 figures, Proceedings of the Conference "Horizons in Complex
Systems", Messina; in honor of the 60th birthday of H.E. Stanle
Supercooled Water and the Kinetic Glass Transition II: Collective Dynamics
In this article we study in detail the Q-vector dependence of the collective
dynamics in simulated deeply supercooled SPC/E water. The evolution of the
system has been followed for 250 ns at low T, allowing a clear identification
of a two step relaxation process. We present evidence in favor of the use of
the mode coupling theory for supercooled liquid as framework for the
description of the slow alpha-relaxation dynamics in SPC/E water,
notwithstanding the fact that the cage formation in this system is controlled
by the formation of an open network of hydrogen bonds as opposed to packing
constraints, as in the case of simple liquids.Comment: rev-tex + 9 figure
Periodic and Quasi-Periodic Compensation Strategies of Extreme Outages caused by Polarization Mode Dispersion and Amplifier Noise
Effect of birefringent disorder on the Bit Error Rate (BER) in an optical
fiber telecommunication system subject to amplifier noise may lead to extreme
outages, related to anomalously large values of BER. We analyze the Probability
Distribution Function (PDF) of BER for various strategies of Polarization Mode
Dispersion (PMD) compensation. A compensation method is proposed that is
capable of more efficient extreme outages suppression, which leads to
substantial improvement of the fiber system performance.Comment: 3 pages, 1 figure, Submitted to IEEE Photonics Letter
Magnetic levitation on a type-I superconductor as a practical demonstration experiment for students
We describe and discuss an experimental set-up which allows undergraduate and
graduate students to view and study magnetic levitation on a type-I
superconductor. The demonstration can be repeated many times using one readily
available 25 liter liquid helium dewar. We study the equilibrium position of a
magnet that levitates over a lead bowl immersed in a liquid hand-held helium
cryostat. We combine the measurement of the position of the magnet with simple
analytical calculations. This provides a vivid visualization of magnetic
levitation from the balance between pure flux expulsion and gravitation. The
experiment contrasts and illustrates the case of magnetic levitation with high
temperature type-II superconductors using liquid nitrogen, where levitation
results from partial flux expulsion and vortex physics
A general interpolation scheme for thermal fluctuations in superconductors
We present a general interpolation theory for the phenomenological effects of
thermal fluctuations in superconductors. Fluctuations are described by a simple
gauge invariant extension of the gaussian effective potential for the
Ginzburg-Landau static model. The approach is shown to be a genuine variational
method, and to be stationary for infinitesimal gauge variations around the
Landau gauge. Correlation and penetration lengths are shown to depart from the
mean field behaviour in a more or less wide range of temperature below the
critical regime, depending on the class of material considered. The method is
quite general and yields a very good interpolation of the experimental data for
very different materials.Comment: some misprints have been corrected in Eq.(15),(19); more references
and comments have been adde
Photon Shot Noise Dephasing in the Strong-Dispersive Limit of Circuit QED
We study the photon shot noise dephasing of a superconducting transmon qubit
in the strong-dispersive limit, due to the coupling of the qubit to its readout
cavity. As each random arrival or departure of a photon is expected to
completely dephase the qubit, we can control the rate at which the qubit
experiences dephasing events by varying \textit{in situ} the cavity mode
population and decay rate. This allows us to verify a pure dephasing mechanism
that matches theoretical predictions, and in fact explains the increased
dephasing seen in recent transmon experiments as a function of cryostat
temperature. We investigate photon dynamics in this limit and observe large
increases in coherence times as the cavity is decoupled from the environment.
Our experiments suggest that the intrinsic coherence of small Josephson
junctions, when corrected with a single Hahn echo, is greater than several
hundred microseconds.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures; includes Supporting Online Material of 6 pages
with 5 figure
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