3,573 research outputs found
A cesium gas strongly confined in one dimension : sideband cooling and collisional properties
We study one-dimensional sideband cooling of Cesium atoms strongly confined
in a far-detuned optical lattice. The Lamb-Dicke regime is achieved in the
lattice direction whereas the transverse confinement is much weaker. The
employed sideband cooling method, first studied by Vuletic et al.\cite{Vule98},
uses Raman transitions between Zeeman levels and produces a spin-polarized
sample. We present a detailed study of this cooling method and investigate the
role of elastic collisions in the system. We accumulate of the atoms
in the vibrational ground state of the strongly confined motion, and elastic
collisions cool the transverse motion to a temperature of K=, where is the oscillation
frequency in the strongly confined direction. The sample then approaches the
regime of a quasi-2D cold gas. We analyze the limits of this cooling method and
propose a dynamical change of the trapping potential as a mean of cooling the
atomic sample to still lower temperatures. Measurements of the rate of
thermalization between the weakly and strongly confined degrees of freedom are
compatible with the zero energy scattering resonance observed previously in
weak 3D traps. For the explored temperature range the measurements agree with
recent calculations of quasi-2D collisions\cite{Petr01}. Transparent analytical
models reproduce the expected behavior for and also for where the 2D
features are prominent.Comment: 18 pages, 12 figure
Time-resolved observation of spin-charge deconfinement in fermionic Hubbard chains
Elementary particles such as the electron carry several quantum numbers, for
example, charge and spin. However, in an ensemble of strongly interacting
particles, the emerging degrees of freedom can fundamentally differ from those
of the individual constituents. Paradigmatic examples of this phenomenon are
one-dimensional systems described by independent quasiparticles carrying either
spin (spinon) or charge (holon). Here we report on the dynamical deconfinement
of spin and charge excitations in real space following the removal of a
particle in Fermi-Hubbard chains of ultracold atoms. Using space- and
time-resolved quantum gas microscopy, we track the evolution of the excitations
through their signatures in spin and charge correlations. By evaluating
multi-point correlators, we quantify the spatial separation of the excitations
in the context of fractionalization into single spinons and holons at finite
temperatures
Male-biased gene flow across an avian hybrid zone: evidence from mitochondrial and microsatellite DNA
Mating pattern and gene flow were studied in the contact zone between two morphologically very similar Chiffchaff taxa (Phylloscopus collybita, P. brehmii) in SW France and northern Spain. Mating was assortative in brehmii, but not in collybita. Mixed matings were strongly asymmetric (excess of callybita male x brehmii female pairs), but did produce viable offspring in some cases. Sequence divergence of the mitochondrial cytochrome b gene was 4.6%; Haplotypes segregated significantly with phenotype (only five 'mismatches' among 94 individuals), demonstrating that mitochondrial gene flow was very restricted. The estimated proportion of F-1 hybrids in the reproductive population was significantly lower than expected under a closed population model, indicating strong selection against hybrids. Genetic typing of 101 individuals at four microsatellite loci also showed significant population differentiation, but nuclear gene flow was estimated to be 75 times higher than mitochondrial gene flow. This strong discrepancy is probably due to unisexual hybrid sterility (Haldane's rule). Thus, there is a strong, but incomplete, reproductive barrier between these taxa
Optical control of photon tunneling through an array of nanometer scale cylindrical channels
We report first observation of photon tunneling gated by light at a different
wavelength in an artificially created array of nanometer scale cylindrical
channels in a thick gold film. Polarization properties of gated light provide
strong proof of the enhanced nonlinear optical mixing in nanometric channels
involved in the process. This suggests the possibility of building a new class
of "gated" photon tunneling devices for massive parallel all-optical signal and
image processing.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
A smoothing monotonic convergent optimal control algorithm for NMR pulse sequence design
The past decade has demonstrated increasing interests in using optimal
control based methods within coherent quantum controllable systems. The
versatility of such methods has been demonstrated with particular elegance
within nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) where natural separation between
coherent and dissipative spin dynamics processes has enabled coherent quantum
control over long periods of time to shape the experiment to almost ideal
adoption to the spin system and external manipulations. This has led to new
design principles as well as powerful new experimental methods within magnetic
resonance imaging, liquid-state and solid-state NMR spectroscopy. For this
development to continue and expand, it is crucially important to constantly
improve the underlying numerical algorithms to provide numerical solutions
which are optimally compatible with implementation on current instrumentation
and at same time are numerically stable and offer fast monotonic convergence
towards the target. Addressing such aims, we here present a smoothing
monotonically convergent algorithm for pulse sequence design in magnetic
resonance which with improved optimization stability lead to smooth pulse
sequence easier to implement experimentally and potentially understand within
the analytical framework of modern NMR spectroscopy
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