1,554 research outputs found
Ozone Transport and the Clean Air Act: The Answers Are Blowin\u27 in the Wind
This Note addresses the major provisions of the Clean Air Act that deal with the transport of ozone from one state to another. After an overview of the Act and specific sections dealing with ozone transport, the Note discusses the Environmental Protection Agency\u27s (the EPA ) inconsistent interpretation and application of the Act, as exposed through the limited case law addressing this issue to date. Next, using the illustrative cases of Pennsylvania and Ohio, the Note discusses how Northeastern states are suffering economically and physically due to Midwestern pollution. This Note concludes that it is time for the EPA to stop avoiding the purpose behind the Clean Air Act and start helping all states to achieve at least minimum clean air standards. The inevitable result, surely consonant with the Congressional intent behind the 1990 Amendments, as well as the desires of all Americans, would be a healthier and more prosperous United States
Thermal distortions of non-Gaussian beams in Fabry–Perot cavities
Thermal effects are already important in currently operating interferometric gravitational wave detectors. Planned upgrades of these detectors involve increasing optical power to combat quantum shot noise. We consider the ramifications of this increased power for one particular class of laser beams—wide, flat-topped, mesa beams. In particular we model a single mesa beam Fabry–Perot cavity having thermoelastically deformed mirrors. We calculate the intensity profile of the fundamental cavity eigenmode in the presence of thermal perturbations, and the associated changes in thermal noise. We also outline an idealized method of correcting for such effects. At each stage we contrast our results with those of a comparable Gaussian beam cavity. Although we focus on mesa beams the techniques described are applicable to any azimuthally symmetric system
Recent results of a seismically isolated optical table prototype designed for advanced LIGO
The Horizontal Access Module Seismic Attenuation System (HAM-SAS) is a mechanical device expressly designed to isolate a multipurpose optical table and fit in the tight space of the LIGO HAM Ultra-High-Vacuum chamber. Seismic attenuation in the detectors' sensitivity frequency band is achieved with state of the art passive mechanical attenuators. These devices should provide an attenuation factor of about 70dB above 10Hz at the suspension point of the Advanced LIGO triple pendulum suspension. Automatic control techniques are used to position the optical table and damp rigid body modes. Here, we report the main results obtained from the full scale prototype installed at the MIT LIGO Advanced System Test Interferometer (LASTI) facility. Seismic attenuation performance, control strategies, improvements and limitations are also discussed
Phase-matched second-harmonic generation in a ferroelectric liquid crystal waveguide
True phase-matched second-harmonic generation in a waveguide of crosslinkable
ferroelectric liquid crystals is demonstrated. These materials allow the
formation of macroscopically polar structures whose order can be frozen by
photopolymerization. Homeotropic alignment was chosen which offers decisive
advantages compared to other geometries. All parameters contributing to the
conversion efficiency are maximized by deliberately controlling the
supramolecular arrangement. The system has the potential to achieve practical
level of performances as a frequency doubler for low power laser diodes.Comment: 4 pages, LaTeX2e article, 3 figures, 4 EPS files, submitted to
Physical Review Letter
The dependence of test-mass thermal noises on beam shape in gravitational-wave interferometers
In second-generation, ground-based interferometric gravitational-wave
detectors such as Advanced LIGO, the dominant noise at frequencies
Hz to Hz is expected to be due to thermal fluctuations in the
mirrors' substrates and coatings which induce random fluctuations in the shape
of the mirror face. The laser-light beam averages over these fluctuations; the
larger the beam and the flatter its light-power distribution, the better the
averaging and the lower the resulting thermal noise. In semi-infinite mirrors,
scaling laws for the influence of beam shape on the four dominant types of
thermal noise (coating Brownian, coating thermoelastic, substrate Brownian, and
substrate thermoelastic) have been suggested by various researchers and derived
with varying degrees of rigour. Because these scaling laws are important tools
for current research on optimizing the beam shape, it is important to firm up
our understanding of them. This paper (1) gives a summary of the prior work and
of gaps in the prior analyses, (2) gives a unified and rigorous derivation of
all four scaling laws, and (3) explores, relying on work by J. Agresti,
deviations from the scaling laws due to finite mirror size.Comment: 25 pages, 10 figures, submitted to Class. Quantum Gra
Ultralong-Range Rydberg Molecules in a Divalent-Atomic System
We report the creation of ultralong-range Sr molecules comprising one
ground-state atom and one atom in a Rydberg state
for ranging from 29 to 36. Molecules are created in a trapped ultracold
atomic gas using two-photon excitation near resonant with the
intermediate state, and their formation is detected through ground-state atom
loss from the trap. The observed molecular binding energies are fit with the
aid of first-order perturbation theory that utilizes a Fermi pseudopotential
with effective -wave and -wave scattering lengths to describe the
interaction between an excited Rydberg electron and a ground-state Sr atom.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
Operational status of TAMA300 with the seismic attenuation system (SAS)
TAMA300 has been upgraded to improve the sensitivity at low frequencies after the last observation run in 2004. To avoid the noise caused by seismic activities, we installed a new seismic isolation system —- the TAMA seismic attenuation system (SAS). Four SAS towers for the test-mass mirrors were sequentially installed from 2005 to 2006. The recycled Fabry–Perot Michelson interferometer was successfully locked with the SAS. We confirmed the reduction of both length and angular fluctuations at frequencies higher than 1 Hz owing to the SAS
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