1,649 research outputs found
Possible role of the phagocytic proteinases, cathepsin B and elastas, in orthotopic liver transplantation
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Self-synchronization and dissipation-induced threshold in collective atomic recoil lasing
Networks of globally coupled oscillators exhibit phase transitions from incoherent to coherent states. Atoms interacting with the counterpropagating modes of a unidirectionally pumped high-finesse ring cavity form such a globally coupled network. The coupling mechanism is provided by collective atomic recoil lasing, i.e., cooperative Bragg scattering of laser light at an atomic density grating, which is self-induced by the laser light. Under the rule of an additional friction force, the atomic ensemble is expected to undergo a phase transition to a state of synchronized atomic motion. We present the experimental investigation of this phase transition by studying the threshold behavior of this lasing process
Ultra-cold atoms in an optical cavity: two-mode laser locking to the cavity avoiding radiation pressure
The combination of ultra-cold atomic clouds with the light fields of optical
cavities provides a powerful model system for the development of new types of
laser cooling and for studying cooperative phenomena. These experiments
critically depend on the precise tuning of an incident pump laser with respect
to a cavity resonance. Here, we present a simple and reliable experimental
tuning scheme based on a two-mode laser spectrometer. The scheme uses a first
laser for probing higher-order transversal modes of the cavity having an
intensity minimum near the cavity's optical axis, where the atoms are confined
by a magnetic trap. In this way the cavity resonance is observed without
exposing the atoms to unwanted radiation pressure. A second laser, which is
phase-locked to the first one and tuned close to a fundamental cavity mode
drives the coherent atom-field dynamics.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figure
Cooperative Scattering by Cold Atoms
We have studied the interplay between disorder and cooperative scattering for
single scattering limit in the presence of a driving laser. Analytical results
have been derived and we have observed cooperative scattering effects in a
variety of experiments, ranging from thermal atoms in an optical dipole trap,
atoms released from a dark MOT and atoms in a BEC, consistent with our
theoretical predictions.Comment: submitted for special issue of PQE 201
Ad- and desorption of Rb atoms on a gold nanofilm measured by surface plasmon polaritons
Hybrid quantum systems made of cold atoms near nanostructured surfaces are
expected to open up new opportunities for the construction of quantum sensors
and for quantum information. For the design of such tailored quantum systems
the interaction of alkali atoms with dielectric and metallic surfaces is
crucial and required to be understood in detail. Here, we present real-time
measurements of the adsorption and desorption of Rubidium atoms on gold
nanofilms. Surface plasmon polaritons (SPP) are excited at the gold surface and
detected in a phase sensitive way. From the temporal change of the SPP phase
the Rubidium coverage of the gold film is deduced with a sensitivity of better
than 0.3 % of a monolayer. By comparing the experimental data with a Langmuir
type adsorption model we obtain the thermal desorption rate and the sticking
probability. In addition, also laser-induced desorption is observed and
quantified.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figure
Ensemble of Hankel Matrices for Face Emotion Recognition
In this paper, a face emotion is considered as the result of the composition
of multiple concurrent signals, each corresponding to the movements of a
specific facial muscle. These concurrent signals are represented by means of a
set of multi-scale appearance features that might be correlated with one or
more concurrent signals. The extraction of these appearance features from a
sequence of face images yields to a set of time series. This paper proposes to
use the dynamics regulating each appearance feature time series to recognize
among different face emotions. To this purpose, an ensemble of Hankel matrices
corresponding to the extracted time series is used for emotion classification
within a framework that combines nearest neighbor and a majority vote schema.
Experimental results on a public available dataset shows that the adopted
representation is promising and yields state-of-the-art accuracy in emotion
classification.Comment: Paper to appear in Proc. of ICIAP 2015. arXiv admin note: text
overlap with arXiv:1506.0500
Cavity-enhanced superradiant Rayleigh scattering with ultra-cold and Bose-Einstein condensed atoms
We report on the observation of collective atomic recoil lasing and
superradiant Rayleigh scattering with ultracold and Bose-Einstein condensed
atoms in an optical ring cavity. Both phenomena are based on instabilities
evoked by the collective interaction of light with cold atomic gases. This
publication clarifies the link between the two effects. The observation of
superradiant behavior with thermal clouds as hot as several tens of
proves that the phenomena are driven by the cooperative
dynamics of the atoms, which is strongly enhanced by the presence of the ring
cavity.Comment: 10 pages, 10 figure
The role of Mie scattering in the seeding of matter-wave superradiance
Matter-wave superradiance is based on the interplay between ultracold atoms
coherently organized in momentum space and a backscattered wave. Here, we show
that this mechanism may be triggered by Mie scattering from the atomic cloud.
We show how the laser light populates the modes of the cloud, and thus imprints
a phase gradient on the excited atomic dipoles. The interference with the atoms
in the ground state results in a grating, that in turn generates coherent
emission, contributing to the backward light wave onset. The atomic recoil
'halos' created by the scattered light exhibit a strong anisotropy, in contrast
to single-atom scattering
Traffic-Related Air Pollution and All-Cause Mortality during Tuberculosis Treatment in California.
BackgroundAmbient air pollution and tuberculosis (TB) have an impact on public health worldwide, yet associations between the two remain uncertain.ObjectiveWe determined the impact of residential traffic on mortality during treatment of active TB.MethodsFrom 2000-2012, we enrolled 32,875 patients in California with active TB and followed them throughout treatment. We obtained patient data from the California Tuberculosis Registry and calculated traffic volumes and traffic densities in 100- to 400-m radius buffers around residential addresses. We used Cox models to determine mortality hazard ratios, controlling for demographic, socioeconomic, and clinical potential confounders. We categorized traffic exposures as quintiles and determined trends using Wald tests.ResultsParticipants contributed 22,576 person-years at risk. There were 2,305 deaths during treatment for a crude mortality rate of 1,021 deaths per 10,000 person-years. Traffic volumes and traffic densities in all buffers around patient residences were associated with increased mortality during TB treatment, although the findings were not statistically significant in all buffers. As the buffer size decreased, fifth-quintile mortality hazards increased, and trends across quintiles of traffic exposure became more statistically significant. Increasing quintiles of nearest-road traffic volumes in the 100-m buffer were associated with 3%, 14%, 19%, and 28% increased risk of death during TB treatment [first quintile, referent; second quintile hazard ratio (HR)=1.03 [95% confidence interval (CI): 0.86, 1.25]; third quintile HR=1.14 (95% CI: 0.95, 1.37); fourth quintile HR=1.19 (95% CI: 0.99, 1.43); fifth quintile HR=1.28 (95% CI: 1.07, 1.53), respectively; p-trend=0.002].ConclusionsResidential proximity to road traffic volumes and traffic density were associated with increased all-cause mortality in patients undergoing treatment for active tuberculosis even after adjusting for multiple demographic, socioeconomic, and clinical factors, suggesting that TB patients are susceptible to the adverse health effects of traffic-related air pollution. https://doi.org/10.1289/EHP1699
Experimental perspectives for systems based on long-range interactions
The possibility of observing phenomena peculiar to long-range interactions,
and more specifically in the so-called Quasi-Stationary State (QSS) regime is
investigated within the framework of two devices, namely the Free-Electron
Laser (FEL) and the Collective Atomic Recoil Laser (CARL). The QSS dynamics has
been mostly studied using the Hamiltonian Mean-Field (HMF) toy model,
demonstrating in particular the presence of first versus second order phase
transitions from magnetized to unmagnetized regimes in the case of HMF. Here,
we give evidence of the strong connections between the HMF model and the
dynamics of the two mentioned devices, and we discuss the perspectives to
observe some specific QSS features experimentally. In particular, a dynamical
analog of the phase transition is present in the FEL and in the CARL in its
conservative regime. Regarding the dissipative CARL, a formal link is
established with the HMF model. For both FEL and CARL, calculations are
performed with reference to existing experimental devices, namely the
FERMI@Elettra FEL under construction at Sincrotrone Trieste (Italy) and the
CARL system at LENS in Florence (Italy)
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