6,200 research outputs found

    DC field induced enhancement and inhibition of spontaneous emission in a cavity

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    We demonstrate how spontaneous emission in a cavity can be controlled by the application of a dc field. The method is specially suitable for Rydberg atoms. We present a simple argument for the control of emission.Comment: 3-pages, 2figure. accepted in Phys. Rev.

    A Simplest Swimmer at Low Reynolds Number: Three Linked Spheres

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    We propose a very simple one-dimensional swimmer consisting of three spheres that are linked by rigid rods whose lengths can change between two values. With a periodic motion in a non-reciprocal fashion, which breaks the time-reversal symmetry as well as the translational symmetry, we show that the model device can swim at low Reynolds number. This model system could be used in constructing molecular-size machines

    Recent Extreme Ultraviolet Solar Spectra and Spectroheliograms

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    Extreme ultraviolet solar spectra and spectroheliogram analyse

    Current noise of a quantum dot p-i-n junction in a photonic crystal

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    The shot-noise spectrum of a quantum dot p-i-n junction embedded inside a three-dimensional photonic crystal is investigated. Radiative decay properties of quantum dot excitons can be obtained from the observation of the current noise. The characteristic of the photonic band gap is revealed in the current noise with discontinuous behavior. Applications of such a device in entanglement generation and emission of single photons are pointed out, and may be achieved with current technologies.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, to appear in Phys. Rev. B (2005

    Graduate dress code: How undergraduates are planning to use hair, clothes and make-up to smooth their transition to the workplace

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    This article explores the relationship between students’ identities, their ideas about professional appearance and their anticipated transition to the world of work. It is based on a series of semi-structured interviews with 13 students from a vocationally-focused university in England. It was found that participants viewed clothing and appearance as an important aspect of their transition to the workplace. They believed that, if carefully handled, their appearance could help them to fit in and satisfy the expectations of employers, although some participants anticipated that this process of fitting in might compromise their identity and values. The article addresses students’ anticipated means of handling the tension between adapting to a new environment and ‘being themselves’. It is argued that the way this process is handled is intertwined with wider facets of identity – most notably those associated with gender.The article is based on research funded by the University of Derby. © 2015 IP Publishing Ltd. ((http://www.ippublishing.com). Reproduced by permission

    Inertial Focusing of Particles in Curved Micro-channels

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    Inertial focusing is the migration of particles in flow laterally across a channel into well-defined equilibrium positions. In microfluidic channels, inertial focusing takes advantage of hydrodynamic interactions even at high flow speeds. Particle isolation through inertial focusing is a high throughput method of processing biological samples for point-of-care diagnostics. While photos provide qualitative analyses of inertial focusing, we desired quantitative characterization of these systems. In this study, we ran flow experiments, first with fluorescent polystyrene beads and later with cells in solution, through curved micro-channels at controlled rates using a syringe pump. Our results from polystyrene bead experiments confirmed previous studies on flow through curved micro-channels, in which particles are focused along both sides of the channel at low flow rates and transition towards the center of the channel as the flow rate increases. FWHM analysis also showed that the streamline width is minimized at an intermediate flow rate, indicating inertial focusing is optimized under that condition. As this method of analysis was confirmed with polystyrene beads, we further used this analysis method to characterize the focusing of cells in solution. To maximize both throughput and purity, microfluidic devices must be designed to operate at the highest flow rate at which effective separation from bulk fluid can occur. The device presented in this report indeed isolates the desired target cells to be studied in downstream characterization.http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/169578/1/Honors_Capstone_Anna_Kaehr.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/169578/2/Kaehr_Anna_Capstone_Poster.pptxhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/169578/3/Capstone_Presentation_Video_Anna_Kaehr.mp

    Revisiting the Hanbury Brown-Twiss set-up for fractional statistics

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    The Hanbury Brown-Twiss experiment has proved to be an effective means of probing statistics of particles. Here, in a set-up involving edge-state quasiparticles in a fractional quantum Hall system, we show that a variant of the experiment composed of two sources and two sinks can be used to unearth fractional statistics. We find a clear cut signature of the statistics in the equal-time current-current correlation function for quasiparticle currents emerging from the two sources and collected at the sinks.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure

    Strongly Coupled Matter-Field and Non-Analytic Decay Rate of Dipole Molecules in a Waveguide

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    The decay rate \gam of an excited dipole molecule inside a waveguide is evaluated for the strongly coupled matter-field case near a cutoff frequency \ome_c without using perturbation analysis. Due to the singularity in the density of photon states at the cutoff frequency, we find that \gam depends non-analytically on the coupling constant ⋙\ggg as ⋙4/3\ggg^{4/3}. In contrast to the ordinary evaluation of \gam which relies on the Fermi golden rule (itself based on perturbation analysis), \gam has an upper bound and does not diverge at \ome_c even if we assume perfect conductance in the waveguide walls. As a result, again in contrast to the statement found in the literature, the speed of emitted light from the molecule does not vanish at \ome_c and is proportional to c⋙2/3c\ggg^{2/3} which is on the order of 103∼10410^3 \sim 10^4 m/s for typical dipole molecules.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure

    Vertical beaming of wavelength-scale photonic crystal resonators

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    We report that >80> 80% of the photons generated inside a photonic crystal slab resonator can be funneled within a small divergence angle of ±30∘\pm 30^\circ. The far-field radiation properties of a photonic crystal slab resonant mode are modified by tuning the cavity geometry and by placing a reflector below the cavity. The former method directly shapes the near-field distribution so as to achieve directional and linearly-polarized far-field patterns. The latter modification takes advantage of the interference effect between the original waves and the reflected waves to enhance the energy-directionality. We find that, regardless of the slab thickness, the optimum distance between the slab and the reflector closely equals one wavelength of the resonance under consideration. We have also discussed an efficient far-field simulation algorithm based on the finite-difference time-domain method and the near- to far-field transformation.Comment: 14 pages, 15 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.

    Magnetic field induced lattice anomaly inside the superconducting state of CeCoIn5_5: evidence of the proposed Fulde-Ferrell-Larkin-Ovchinnikov state

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    We report high magnetic field linear magnetostriction experiments on CeCoIn5_5 single crystals. Two features are remarkable: (i) a sharp discontinuity in all the crystallographic axes associated with the upper superconducting critical field Bc2B_{c2} that becomes less pronounced as the temperature increases; (ii) a distinctive second order-like feature observed only along the c-axis in the high field (10 T ≲B≤Bc2 \lesssim B \leq B_{c2}) low temperature (T≲T \lesssim 0.35 K) region. This second order transition is observed only when the magnetic field lies within 20o^o of the ab-planes and there is no signature of it above Bc2B_{c2}, which raises questions regarding its interpretation as a field induced magnetically ordered phase. Good agreement with previous results suggests that this anomaly is related to the transition to the Fulde-Ferrel-Larkin-Ovchinnikov superconducting state.Comment: 3 figures, 5 page
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