710 research outputs found
Bleaching of sol-gel glass film with embedded gold nanoparticles by thermal poling
Gold clusters embedded in glass are expected to be hard to dissolve in the form of ions since gold is essentially a nonreactive metal. In spite of that, bleaching of Au-doped nanocomposite sol-gel glass film on a soda-lime glass substrate is demonstrated in which electric-field thermal poling is employed to effectively dissolve randomly distributed gold nanoparticles (15 nm in diameter) embedded in a low conductivity sol-gel glass film with a volume filling factor as small as 2.3%. The surface plasmon absorption band at 520 nm is suppressed in the region covered by the anodic electrode. The phenomenon is explained by the ionization of the gold nanoparticles and the redistribution of gold ions in the glass matrix due to the action of the extremely high electrostatic field locally developed during poling
Generating a Schr\"odinger-cat-like state via a coherent superposition of photonic operations
We propose an optical scheme to generate a superposition of coherent states
with enhanced size adopting an interferometric setting at the single-photon
level currently available in the laboratory. Our scheme employs a nondegenerate
optical parametric amplifier together with two beam splitters so that the
detection of single photons at the output conditionally implements the desired
superposition of second-order photonic operations. We analyze our proposed
scheme by considering realistic on-off photodetectors with nonideal efficiency
in heralding the success of conditional events. A high-quality performance of
our scheme is demonstrated in view of various criteria such as quantum
fidelity, mean output energy, and measure of quantum interference
Experiences regarding maternal age-specific risks and prenatal testing of women of advanced maternal age in Japan.
The number of pregnant women of advanced maternal age has increased worldwide. Women in this group have an increased chance of fetal abnormality. To explore Japanese women's experiences regarding maternal age-specific risks and prenatal testing, we conducted a descriptive qualitative study. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with 16 women aged 35 years or over who had given birth within the previous three months to a healthy, term infant. Thematic analysis of transcribed interview data was performed and three major themes were identified: inadequate understanding of genetic risks; insufficiently informed choice regarding prenatal testing; and need for more information from health professionals. Some participants were not aware of maternal age-specific risks to the fetus. Many took their cues from health professionals and did not raise the topic themselves, but would have considered prenatal testing if made aware of the risks. Nurses, midwives and other health professionals need to adequately inform pregnant women about the genetic risks to the fetus and offer testing at an appropriate stage early in the pregnancy
Total Angular Momentum Conservation During Tunnelling through Semiconductor Barriers
We have investigated the electrical transport through strained
p-Si/Si_{1-x}Ge_x double-barrier resonant tunnelling diodes. The confinement
shift for diodes with different well width, the shift due to a central
potential spike in a well, and magnetotunnelling spectroscopy demonstrate that
the first two resonances are due to tunnelling through heavy hole levels,
whereas there is no sign of tunnelling through the first light hole state. This
demonstrates for the first time the conservation of the total angular momentum
in valence band resonant tunnelling. It is also shown that conduction through
light hole states is possible in many structures due to tunnelling of carriers
from bulk emitter states.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen-like correlation on a coherent-state basis and inseparability of two-mode Gaussian states
The strange property of the Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen (EPR) correlation between
two remote physical systems is a primitive object on the study of quantum
entanglement. In order to understand the entanglement in canonical
continuous-variable systems, a pair of the EPR-like uncertainties is an
essential tool. Here, we consider a normalized pair of the EPR-like
uncertainties and introduce a state-overlap to a classically correlated mixture
of coherent states. The separable condition associated with this state-overlap
determines the strength of the EPR-like correlation on a coherent-state basis
in order that the state is entangled. We show that the coherent-state-based
condition is capable of detecting the class of two-mode Gaussian entangled
states. We also present an experimental measurement scheme for estimation of
the state-overlap by a heterodyne measurement and a photon detection with a
feedforward operation.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures. A part of the materials in Sec. VI B of previous
versions was moved into another paper: Journal of Atomic, Molecular, and
Optical Physics, 2012, 854693 (2012).
http://www.hindawi.com/journals/jamop/2012/854693
Empirical comparison of high gradient achievement for different metals in DC and pulsed mode
For the SwissFEL project, an advanced high gradient low emittance gun is
under development. Reliable operation with an electric field, preferably above
125 MV/m at a 4 mm gap, in the presence of an UV laser beam, has to be achieved
in a diode configuration in order to minimize the emittance dilution due to
space charge effects. In the first phase, a DC breakdown test stand was used to
test different metals with different preparation methods at voltages up to 100
kV. In addition high gradient stability tests were also carried out over
several days in order to prove reliable spark-free operation with a minimum
dark current. In the second phase, electrodes with selected materials were
installed in the 250 ns FWHM, 500 kV electron gun and tested for high gradient
breakdown and for quantum efficiency using an ultra-violet laser.Comment: 25 pages, 13 figures, 5 tables. Follow up from FEL 2008 conference
(Geyongju Korea 2008) New Title in JVST A (2010) : Vacuum breakdown limit and
quantum efficiency obtained for various technical metals using DC and pulsed
voltage source
Administration route-dependent vaccine efficiency of murine dendritic cells pulsed with antigens
âDendritic cells (DCs) loaded with tumour antigens have been successfully used to induce protective tumour immunity in murine models and human trials. However, it is still unclear which DC administration route elicits a superior therapeutic effect. Herein, we investigated the vaccine efficiency of DC2.4 cells, a murine dendritic cell line, pulsed with ovalbumin (OVA) in the murine E.G7-OVA tumour model after immunization via various routes. After a single vaccination using 1 Ă 106OVA-pulsed DC2.4 cells, tumour was completely rejected in the intradermally (i.d.; three of four mice), subcutaneously (s.c.; three of four mice), and intraperitoneally (i.p.; one of four mice) immunized groups. Double vaccinations enhanced the anti-tumour effect in all groups except the intravenous (i.v.) group, which failed to achieve complete rejection. The anti-tumour efficacy of each immunization route was correlated with the OVA-specific cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) activity evaluated on day 7 post-vaccination. Furthermore, the accumulation of DC2.4 cells in the regional lymph nodes was detected only in the i.d.-and s.c.-injected groups. These results demonstrate that the administration route of antigen-loaded DCs affects the migration of DCs to lymphoid tissues and the magnitude of antigen-specific CTL response. Furthermore, the immunization route affects vaccine efficiency. © 2001 Cancer Research Campaign http://www.bjcancer.co
Mapping coherence in measurement via full quantum tomography of a hybrid optical detector
Quantum states and measurements exhibit wave-like --- continuous, or
particle-like --- discrete, character. Hybrid discrete-continuous photonic
systems are key to investigating fundamental quantum phenomena, generating
superpositions of macroscopic states, and form essential resources for
quantum-enhanced applications, e.g. entanglement distillation and quantum
computation, as well as highly efficient optical telecommunications. Realizing
the full potential of these hybrid systems requires quantum-optical
measurements sensitive to complementary observables such as field quadrature
amplitude and photon number. However, a thorough understanding of the practical
performance of an optical detector interpolating between these two regions is
absent. Here, we report the implementation of full quantum detector tomography,
enabling the characterization of the simultaneous wave and photon-number
sensitivities of quantum-optical detectors. This yields the largest
parametrization to-date in quantum tomography experiments, requiring the
development of novel theoretical tools. Our results reveal the role of
coherence in quantum measurements and demonstrate the tunability of hybrid
quantum-optical detectors.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figure
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