3,124 research outputs found
Electrically injected cavity polaritons
We have realised a semiconductor quantum structure that produces
electroluminescence while operating in the light-matter strong coupling regime.
The mid-infrared light emitting device is composed of a quantum cascade
structure embedded in a planar microcavity, based on the GaAs/AlGaAs material
system. At zero bias, the structure is characterised using reflectivity
measurements which show, up to room temperature, a wide polariton anticrossing
between an intersubband transition and the resonant cavity photon mode. Under
electrical injection the spectral features of the emitted light change
drastically, as electrons are resonantly injected in a reduced part of the
polariton branches. Our experiment demonstrates that electrons can be
selectively injected into polariton states up to room temperature.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
KM3NeT:a large underwater neutrino telescope in the Mediterranean Sea
High energy neutrinos produced in astrophysical processes will allow for a
new way of studying the universe. In order to detect the expected flux of high
energy neutrinos from specific astrophysical sources, neutrino telescopes of a
scale of a km^3 of water will be needed. A Northern Hemisphere detector is
being proposed to be sited in a deep area of the Mediterranean Sea. This
detector will provide complimentary sky coverage to the IceCube detector being
built at the South Pole. The three neutrino telescope projects in the
Mediterranean (ANTARES, NEMO and NESTOR) are partners in an effort to design,
and build such a km^3 size neutrino telescope, the KM3NeT. The EU is funding a
3-year Design Study; the status of the Design Study is presented and some
technical issues are discussed.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, Prepared for the 10th International Conference on
Astroparticle and Underground Physics (TAUP 2007), Sendai, Japan, 11-15 Sep
200
Anomaly detection in temporal graph data: An iterative tensor decomposition and masking approach
Sensors and Internet-of-Things scenarios promise a wealth of interaction data that can be naturally represented by means of timevarying graphs. This brings forth new challenges for the identification and removal of temporal graph anomalies that entail complex correlations of topological features and activity patterns. Here we present an anomaly detection approach for temporal graph data based on an iterative tensor decomposition and masking procedure. We test this approach using highresolution social network data from wearable sensors and show that it successfully detects anomalies due to sensor wearing time protocols.published_or_final_versio
Photonic crystals with controlled disorder
Photonic crystals are extremely sensitive to structural disorder even to the point of completely losing their functionalities. While, on one side, this can be detrimental for applications in traditional optical devices, on the other side, it gives also rise to very interesting new physics and maybe even new applications. We propose a route to introduce disorder in photonic crystals in a controlled way by creating a certain percentage of vacancies in the lattice. We show how the method works and what type of materials can be obtained this way. Also, we use this system to probe the role of disorder on the resulting transport properties from various points of view, including measurements of the transport and scattering mean free path and the diffusion constant
Strong enhancement of extremely energetic proton production in central heavy ion collisions at intermediate energy
The energetic proton emission has been investigated as a function of the
reaction centrality for the system 58Ni + 58Ni at 30A MeV. Extremely energetic
protons (EpNN > 130 MeV) were measured and their multiplicity is found to
increase almost quadratically with the number of participant nucleons thus
indicating the onset of a mechanism beyond one and two-body dynamics.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, submitted to Physical Review Letter
Response of microchannel plates to single particles and to electromagnetic showers
We report on the response of microchannel plates (MCPs) to single
relativistic particles and to electromagnetic showers. Particle detection by
means of secondary emission of electrons at the MCP surface has long been
proposed and is used extensively in ion time-of-flight mass spectrometers. What
has not been investigated in depth is their use to detect the ionizing
component of showers. The time resolution of MCPs exceeds anything that has
been previously used in calorimeters and, if exploited effectively, could aid
in the event reconstruction at high luminosity colliders. Several prototypes of
photodetectors with the amplification stage based on MCPs were exposed to
cosmic rays and to 491 MeV electrons at the INFN-LNF Beam-Test Facility. The
time resolution and the efficiency of the MCPs are measured as a function of
the particle multiplicity, and the results used to model the response to
high-energy showers.Comment: Paper submitted to NIM
Contemporary presence of dynamical and statistical production of intermediate mass fragments in midperipheral Ni+Ni collisions at 30 MeV/nucleon
The reaction at 30 MeV/nucleon has been experimentally
investigated at the Superconducting Cyclotron of the INFN Laboratori Nazionali
del Sud. In midperipheral collisions the production of massive fragments
(4Z12), consistent with the statistical fragmentation of the
projectile-like residue and the dynamical formation of a neck, joining
projectile-like and target-like residues, has been observed. The fragments
coming from these different processes differ both in charge distribution and
isotopic composition. In particular it is shown that these mechanisms leading
to fragment production act contemporarily inside the same event.Comment: 9 pages, minor correction
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