1,210 research outputs found
An introduction to the theme issue
Citation: Zollman, D. A., & Brown, D. (2016). An introduction to the theme issue. American Journal of Physics, 84(5), 325-326. doi:10.1119/1.4943960When the topic for the 2016 Gordon Research Conference (GRC) on physics research and education was selected in 2012, the timing seemed appropriate. Albert Einstein had explained in 1916 how his general theory of relativity predicted the existence of gravitational waves. Four years ago we could not have imagined that just a few months before this conference the detection of gravitational waves from the collision of two black holes would be announced. Thus, while the physics and education GRC is unique among Gordon Conferences, this one will be even more special in that it will be the first conference to bring together researchers and educators so shortly after a major discovery in the field. The increase in interest in fundamental science generated by this historic announcement is already evident, and the conference will provide a great opportunity to discuss better ways to teach students about relativity and gravitation
Near-field radiative heat transfer between macroscopic planar surfaces
Near-field radiative heat transfer allows heat to propagate across a small
vacuum gap in quantities that are several orders of magnitude greater then the
heat transfer by far-field, blackbody radiation. Although heat transfer via
near-field effects has been discussed for many years, experimental verification
of this theory has been very limited. We have measured the heat transfer
between two macroscopic sapphire plates, finding an increase in agreement with
expectations from theory. These experiments, conducted near 300 K, have
measured the heat transfer as a function of separation over mm to m and as
a function of temperature differences between 2.5 and 30 K. The experiments
demonstrate that evanescence can be put to work to transfer heat from an object
without actually touching it
Sensing and control in dual-recycling laser interferometer gravitational-wave detectors
We introduce length-sensing and control schemes for the dual-recycled cavity-enhanced Michelson interferometer configuration proposed for the Advanced Laser Interferometer Gravitational Wave Observatory (LIGO). We discuss the principles of this scheme and show methods that allow sensing and control signals to be derived. Experimental verification was carried out in three benchtop experiments that are introduced. We present the implications of the results from these experiments for Advanced LIGO and other future interferometric gravitational-wave detectors
Cooperative Recombination of a Quantized High-Density Electron-Hole Plasma
We investigate photoluminescence from a high-density electron-hole plasma in
semiconductor quantum wells created via intense femtosecond excitation in a
strong perpendicular magnetic field, a fully-quantized and tunable system. At a
critical magnetic field strength and excitation fluence, we observe a clear
transition in the band-edge photoluminescence from omnidirectional output to a
randomly directed but highly collimated beam. In addition, changes in the
linewidth, carrier density, and magnetic field scaling of the PL spectral
features correlate precisely with the onset of random directionality,
indicative of cooperative recombination from a high density population of free
carriers in a semiconductor environment
Renormalized Energies of Superfluorescent Bursts from an Electron-Hole Magneto-plasma with High Gain in InGaAs Quantum Wells
We study light emission properties of a population-inverted 2D electron-hole
plasma in a quantizing magnetic field. We observe a series of superfluorescent
bursts, discrete both in time and energy, corresponding to the cooperative
recombination of electron-hole pairs from different Landau levels. The emission
energies are strongly renormalized due to many-body interactions among the
photogenerated carriers, exhibiting red-shifts as large as 20 meV at 15 T.
However, the magnetic field dependence of the lowest Landau level emission line
remains excitonic at all magnetic fields. Interestingly, our time-resolved
measurements show that this lowest-energy burst occurs only after all upper
states become empty, suggesting that this excitonic stability is related to the
`hidden symmetry' of 2D magneto-excitons expected in the magnetic quantum
limit.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Characterization of thermal effects in the Enhanced LIGO Input Optics
We present the design and performance of the LIGO Input Optics subsystem as
implemented for the sixth science run of the LIGO interferometers. The Initial
LIGO Input Optics experienced thermal side effects when operating with 7 W
input power. We designed, built, and implemented improved versions of the Input
Optics for Enhanced LIGO, an incremental upgrade to the Initial LIGO
interferometers, designed to run with 30 W input power. At four times the power
of Initial LIGO, the Enhanced LIGO Input Optics demonstrated improved
performance including better optical isolation, less thermal drift, minimal
thermal lensing and higher optical efficiency. The success of the Input Optics
design fosters confidence for its ability to perform well in Advanced LIGO
Small optic suspensions for Advanced LIGO input optics and other precision optical experiments
We report on the design and performance of small optic suspensions developed
to suppress seismic motion of out-of-cavity optics in the Input Optics
subsystem of the Advanced LIGO interferometric gravitational wave detector.
These compact single stage suspensions provide isolation in all six degrees of
freedom of the optic, local sensing and actuation in three of them, and passive
damping for the other three
High-vacuum-compatible high-power Faraday isolators for gravitational-wave interferometers
Faraday isolators play a key role in the operation of large-scale gravitational-wave detectors. Second-generation gravitational-wave interferometers such as the Advanced Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO) and Advanced Virgo will use high-average-power cw lasers (up to 200 W) requiring specially designed Faraday isolators that are immune to the effects resulting from the laser beam absorption–degraded isolation ratio, thermal lensing, and thermally induced beam steering. In this paper, we present a comprehensive study of Faraday isolators designed specifically for high-performance operation in high-power gravitational-wave interferometers
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