9,424 research outputs found
Vibrational branching ratios and hyperfine structure of BH and its suitability for laser cooling
The simple structure of the BH molecule makes it an excellent candidate for
direct laser cooling. We measure the branching ratios for the decay of the
state to vibrational levels of the ground state, , and find that they are exceedingly favourable for laser
cooling. We verify that the branching ratio for the spin-forbidden transition
to the intermediate state is inconsequentially small. We
measure the frequency of the lowest rotational transition of the X state, and
the hyperfine structure in the relevant levels of both the X and A states, and
determine the nuclear electric quadrupole and magnetic dipole coupling
constants. Our results show that, with a relatively simple laser cooling
scheme, a Zeeman slower and magneto-optical trap can be used to cool, slow and
trap BH molecules.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures. Updated analysis of A state hyperfine structure
and other minor revision
A high quality, efficiently coupled microwave cavity for trapping cold molecules
We characterize a Fabry-Perot microwave cavity designed for trapping atoms
and molecules at the antinode of a microwave field. The cavity is fed from a
waveguide through a small coupling hole. Focussing on the compact resonant
modes of the cavity, we measure how the electric field profile, the cavity
quality factor, and the coupling efficiency, depend on the radius of the
coupling hole. We measure how the quality factor depends on the temperature of
the mirrors in the range from 77 to 293K. The presence of the coupling hole
slightly changes the profile of the mode, leading to increased diffraction
losses around the edges of the mirrors and a small reduction in quality factor.
We find the hole size that maximizes the intra-cavity electric field. We
develop an analytical theory of the aperture-coupled cavity that agrees well
with our measurements, with small deviations due to enhanced diffraction
losses. We find excellent agreement between our measurements and
finite-difference time-domain simulations of the cavity.Comment: 16 pages, 8 figure
New calculation schemes for proton-deuteron scattering including the Coulomb interaction
The Coulomb interaction between the protons is included in the description of
proton-deuteron scattering using the screening and renormalization approach in
the framework of momentum-space integral equations. Two new calculational
schemes are presented that confirm the reliability of the perturbative approach
for treating the screened Coulomb interaction in high partial waves, used by us
in earlier works.Comment: To be published in Phys. Rev.
Electron-phonon coupling and superconductivity-induced distortion of the phonon lineshape in VSi
Phonon measurements in the A15-type superconductors were complicated in the
past because of the unavailability of large single crystals for inelastic
neutron scattering, e.g., in the case of NbSn, or unfavorable neutron
scattering properties in the case of VSi. Hence, only few studies of the
lattice dynamical properties with momentum resolved methods were published, in
particular below the superconducting transition temperature . Here, we
overcome these problems by employing inelastic x-ray scattering and report a
combined experimental and theoretical investigation of lattice dynamics in
VSi with the focus on the temperature-dependent properties of low-energy
acoustic phonon modes in several high-symmetry directions. We paid particular
attention to the evolution of the soft phonon mode of the structural phase
transition observed in our sample at , i.e., just above the
measured superconducting phase transition at . Theoretically,
we predict lattice dynamics including electron-phonon coupling based on
density-functional-perturbation theory and discuss the relevance of the soft
phonon mode with regard to the value of . Furthermore, we explain
superconductivityinduced anomalies in the lineshape of several acoustic phonon
modes using a model proposed by Allen et al., [Phys. Rev. B 56, 5552 (1997)]
Betaine, organic acids and inulin do not affect ileal and total tract nutrient digestibility or microbial fermentation in piglets
The study was conducted to investigate the effects of betaine alone or combined with organic acids and inulin on ileal and total tract nutrient digestibilities and intestinal microbial fermentation characteristics in piglets. In total, 24 four-week-old barrows with an average initial body weight of 6.7 kg were used in two consecutive experiments with 12 piglets each. Betaine, organic acids and inulin at a level of 0.2, 0.4 and 0.2%, respectively, or combinations of these supplements were added to the basal diet. The supplementation of betaine, organic acids and inulin or any of their combinations did not affect ileal and total tract nutrient digestibilities. The microbial fermentation products both at the ileal and faecal level were not affected by any of the treatments. In conclusion, combining betaine with organic acids and inulin did not have any associated effects on the variables that were measured
Beam-excited whistler waves at oblique propagation with relation to STEREO radiation belt observations
Isotropic electron beams are considered to explain the excitation of
whistler waves which have been observed by the STEREO satellite in the Earth's radiation belt.
Aside from their large amplitudes (~240 mV/m), another main signature is the strongly
inclined propagation direction relative to the ambient magnetic field. Electron
temperature anisotropy with <I>T</I><sub>e⊥</sub>><I>T</I><sub>e||</sub>, which preferentially generates parallel
propagating whistler waves, can be excluded as a free energy source.
The instability
arises due to the interaction of the Doppler-shifted cyclotron mode ω=−Ω<sub>e</sub>+<I>kV</I><sub>b</sub>cosθ with
the whistler mode in the wave number range
of <I>kc</I>/ω<sub>e</sub>≤1 (θ is the propagation angle
with respect to the background magnetic field direction, ω<sub>e</sub> is the electron plasma frequency
and Ω<sub>e</sub> the electron cyclotron frequency).
Fluid and kinetic dispersion analysis have been used to calculate the growth rate of the
beam-excited whistlers including the most important parameter dependencies.
One is the beam
velocity (<I>V</I><sub>b</sub>) which, for instability, has to be larger than about 2<I>V</I><sub>Ae</sub>, where <I>V</I><sub>Ae</sub> is the
electron Alfvén speed. With increasing <I>V</I><sub>Ae</sub> the propagation angle (θ) of the fastest growing
whistler waves shifts from θ~20° for <I>V</I><sub>b</sub>=2<I>V</I><sub>Ae</sub> to θ~80° for <I>V</I><sub>b</sub>=5<I>V</I><sub>Ae</sub>.
The growth rate is
reduced by finite electron temperatures and disappears if the electron plasma beta (β<sub>e</sub>)
exceeds β<sub>e</sub>~0.2.
In addition, Gendrin modes (<I>kc</I>/ω<sub>e</sub>≈1) are analyzed to determine the conditions
under which stationary nonlinear waves (whistler oscillitons) can exist. The corresponding
spatial wave profiles are calculated using the full nonlinear fluid approach. The results
are compared with the STEREO satellite
observations
Future monitoring of charged particle energy deposition into the upper atmosphere and comments on possible relationships between atmospheric phenomena and solar and/or geomagnetic activity
Monitoring of earth's atmosphere was conducted for several years utilizing the ITOS series of low-altitude, polar-orbiting weather satellites. A space environment monitoring package was included in these satellites to perform measurements of a portion of earth's charged particle environment. The charged particle observations proposed for the low-altitude weather satellite TIROS N, are described which will provide the capability of routine monitoring of the instantaneous total energy deposition into the upper atmosphere by the precipitation of charged particles from higher altitudes. Such observations may be of use in future studies of the relationships between geomagnetic activity and atmospheric weather pattern developments. Estimates are given to assess the potential importance of this type of energy deposition. Discussion and examples are presented illustrating the importance of distinguishing between solar and geomagnetic activity as possible causative sources. Such differentiation is necessary because of the widely different spatial and time scales involved in the atmospheric energy input resulting from these various sources of activity
Active Semi-Supervised Learning Using Sampling Theory for Graph Signals
We consider the problem of offline, pool-based active semi-supervised
learning on graphs. This problem is important when the labeled data is scarce
and expensive whereas unlabeled data is easily available. The data points are
represented by the vertices of an undirected graph with the similarity between
them captured by the edge weights. Given a target number of nodes to label, the
goal is to choose those nodes that are most informative and then predict the
unknown labels. We propose a novel framework for this problem based on our
recent results on sampling theory for graph signals. A graph signal is a
real-valued function defined on each node of the graph. A notion of frequency
for such signals can be defined using the spectrum of the graph Laplacian
matrix. The sampling theory for graph signals aims to extend the traditional
Nyquist-Shannon sampling theory by allowing us to identify the class of graph
signals that can be reconstructed from their values on a subset of vertices.
This approach allows us to define a criterion for active learning based on
sampling set selection which aims at maximizing the frequency of the signals
that can be reconstructed from their samples on the set. Experiments show the
effectiveness of our method.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures, To appear in KDD'1
Pulsed beams as field probes for precision measurement
We describe a technique for mapping the spatial variation of static electric,
static magnetic, and rf magnetic fields using a pulsed atomic or molecular
beam. The method is demonstrated using a beam designed to measure the electric
dipole moment of the electron. We present maps of the interaction region,
showing sensitivity to (i) electric field variation of 1.5 V/cm at 3.3 kV/cm
with a spatial resolution of 15 mm; (ii) magnetic field variation of 5 nT with
25 mm resolution; (iii) radio-frequency magnetic field amplitude with 15 mm
resolution. This new diagnostic technique is very powerful in the context of
high-precision atomic and molecular physics experiments, where pulsed beams
have not hitherto found widespread application.Comment: 6 pages, 12 figures. Figures heavily compressed to comply with
arxiv's antediluvian file-size polic
Cavity QED in a molecular ion trap
We propose an approach for studying quantum information and performing high
resolution spectroscopy of rotational states of trapped molecular ions using an
on-chip superconducting microwave resonator. Molecular ions have several
advantages over neutral molecules. Ions can be loaded into deep (1 eV) RF traps
and are trapped independent of the electric dipole moment of their rotational
transition. Their charge protects them from motional dephasing and prevents
collisional loss, allowing 1 s coherence times when used as a quantum memory,
with detection of single molecules possible in <10 ms. An analysis of the
detection efficiency and coherence properties of the molecules is presented.Comment: 9 pages, 1 figur
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