1,090 research outputs found
Strong Optomechanical Squeezing of Light
We create squeezed light by exploiting the quantum nature of the mechanical
interaction between laser light and a membrane mechanical resonator embedded in
an optical cavity. The radiation pressure shot noise (fluctuating optical force
from quantum laser amplitude noise) induces resonator motion well above that of
thermally driven motion. This motion imprints a phase shift on the laser light,
hence correlating the amplitude and phase noise, a consequence of which is
optical squeezing. We experimentally demonstrate strong and continuous
optomechanical squeezing of 1.7 +/- 0.2 dB below the shot noise level. The peak
level of squeezing measured near the mechanical resonance is well described by
a model whose parameters are independently calibrated and that includes thermal
motion of the membrane with no other classical noise sources.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figure
Topography Experiment (TOPEX) Software Document Series Volume 7: TOPEX Mission Radar Altimeter Engineering Assessment Report, February 1994
This document describes the GSFC/WFF analysis of the on-orbit engineering data from the TOPEX radar altimeter, to establish altimeter performance. In accordance with Project guidelines, neither surface truth nor precision orbital data are used for the engineering assessment of the altimeter. The use of such data would imply not only a more intensive and complete performance evaluation, but also a calibration. Such evaluations and.calibrations are outside the scope of this document and will be presented in a separate Verification Report
Manifestation of classical wave delays in a fully quantized model of the scattering of a single photon
We consider a fully quantized model of spontaneous emission, scattering, and
absorption, and study propagation of a single photon from an emitting atom to a
detector atom both with and without an intervening scatterer. We find an exact
quantum analog to the classical complex analytic signal of an electromagnetic
wave scattered by a medium of charged oscillators. This quantum signal exhibits
classical phase delays. We define a time of detection which, in the appropriate
limits, exactly matches the predictions of a classically defined delay for
light propagating through a medium of charged oscillators. The fully quantized
model provides a simple, unambiguous, and causal interpretation of delays that
seemingly imply speeds greater than c in the region of anomalous dispersion.Comment: 18 pages, 4 figures, revised for clarity, typos corrrecte
Cavity optomechanics with Si3N4 membranes at cryogenic temperatures
We describe a cryogenic cavity-optomechanical system that combines Si3N4
membranes with a mechanically-rigid Fabry-Perot cavity. The extremely high
quality-factor frequency products of the membranes allow us to cool a MHz
mechanical mode to a phonon occupation of less than 10, starting at a bath
temperature of 5 kelvin. We show that even at cold temperatures
thermally-occupied mechanical modes of the cavity elements can be a limitation,
and we discuss methods to reduce these effects sufficiently to achieve ground
state cooling. This promising new platform should have versatile uses for
hybrid devices and searches for radiation pressure shot noise.Comment: 19 pages, 5 figures, submitted to New Journal of Physic
Tensile strained membranes for cavity optomechanics
We investigate the optomechanical properties of tensile-strained ternary
InGaP nanomembranes grown on GaAs. This material system combines the benefits
of highly strained membranes based on stoichiometric silicon nitride, with the
unique properties of thin-film semiconductor single crystals, as previously
demonstrated with suspended GaAs. Here we employ lattice mismatch in epitaxial
growth to impart an intrinsic tensile strain to a monocrystalline thin film
(approximately 30 nm thick). These structures exhibit mechanical quality
factors of 2*10^6 or beyond at room temperature and 17 K for eigenfrequencies
up to 1 MHz, yielding Q*f products of 2*10^12 Hz for a tensile stress of ~170
MPa. Incorporating such membranes in a high finesse Fabry-Perot cavity, we
extract an upper limit to the total optical loss (including both absorption and
scatter) of 40 ppm at 1064 nm and room temperature. Further reductions of the
In content of this alloy will enable tensile stress levels of 1 GPa, with the
potential for a significant increase in the Q*f product, assuming no
deterioration in the mechanical loss at this composition and strain level. This
materials system is a promising candidate for the integration of strained
semiconductor membrane structures with low-loss semiconductor mirrors and for
realizing stacks of membranes for enhanced optomechanical coupling.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figure
Coronavirus and Pasteurella infections in bovine shipping fever pneumonia and Evans\u27 criteria for causation
Respiratory tract infections with viruses and Pasteurella spp. were determined sequentially among 26 cattle that died during two severe epizootics of shipping fever pneumonia. Nasal swab and serum samples were collected prior to onset of the epizootics, during disease progression, and after death, when necropsies were performed and lung samples were collected. Eighteen normal control cattle also were sampled at the beginning of the epizootics as well as at weekly intervals for 4 weeks. Respiratory bovine coronaviruses (RBCV) were isolated from nasal secretions of 21 and 25 cattle before and after transport. Two and 17 cattle nasally shed Pasteurella spp. before and after transport, respectively. RBCV were isolated at titers of 1 x 103 to 1.2 x 107 PFU per g of lung tissue from 18 cattle that died within 7 days of the epizootics, but not from the lungs of the remaining cattle that died on days 9 to 36. Twenty-five of the 26 lung samples were positive for Pasteurella spp., and their CFU ranged between 4.0 x 105 and 2.3 x 109 per g. Acute and subacute exudative, necrotizing lobar pneumonia characterized the lung lesions of these cattle with a majority of pneumonic lung lobes exhibiting fibronecrotic and exudative changes typical of pneumonic pasteurellosis, but other lung lobules had histological changes consisting of bronchiolitis and alveolitis typical of virus-induced changes. These cattle were immunologically naive to both infectious agents at the onset of the epizootics, but those that died after day 7 had rising antibody titers against RBCV and Pasteurella haemolytica. In contrast, the 18 clinically normal and RBCV isolation-negative cattle had high hemagglutinin inhibition antibody titers to RBCV from the beginning, while their antibody responses to P. haemolytica antigens were delayed. Evans\u27 criteria for causation were applied to our findings because of the multifactorial nature of shipping fever pneumonia. This analysis identified RBCV as the primary inciting cause in these two epizootics. These viruses were previously not recognized as a causative agent in this complex respiratory tract disease of cattle
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