184 research outputs found

    Comprehensive Analysis of Escape-Cone Losses from Luminescent Waveguides

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    Luminescent waveguides (LWs) occur in a wide range of applications, from solar concentrators to doped fiber amplifiers. Here we report a comprehensive analysis of escape-cone losses in LWs, which are losses associated with internal rays making an angle less than the critical angle with a waveguide surface. For applications such as luminescent solar concentrators, escape-cone losses often dominate all others. A statistical treatment of escape-cone losses is given accounting for photoselection, photon polarization, and the Fresnel relations, and the model is used to analyze light absorption and propagation in waveguides with isotropic and orientationally aligned luminophores. The results are then compared to experimental measurements performed on a fluorescent dye-doped poly(methyl methacrylate) waveguide

    Can Light Signals Travel Faster than c in Nontrivial Vacuua in Flat space-time? Relativistic Causality II

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    In this paper we show that the Scharnhorst effect (Vacuum with boundaries or a Casimir type vacuum) cannot be used to generate signals showing measurable faster-than-c speeds. Furthermore, we aim to show that the Scharnhorst effect would violate special relativity, by allowing for a variable speed of light in vacuum, unless one can specify a small invariant length scale. This invariant length scale would be agreed upon by all inertial observers. We hypothesize the approximate scale of the invariant length.Comment: 12 pages no figure

    One-loop graviton corrections to Maxwell's equations

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    We compute the graviton induced corrections to Maxwell's equations in the one-loop and weak field approximations. The corrected equations are analogous to the classical equations in anisotropic and inhomogeneous media. We analyze in particular the corrections to the dispersion relations. When the wavelength of the electromagnetic field is much smaller than a typical length scale of the graviton two-point function, the speed of light depends on the direction of propagation and on the polarisation of the radiation. In the opposite case, the speed of light may also depend on the energy of the electromagnetic radiation. We study in detail wave propagation in two special backgrounds, flat Robertson-Walker and static, spherically symmetric spacetimes. In the case of a flat Robertson-Walker gravitational background we find that the corrected electromagnetic field equations correspond to an isotropic medium with a time-dependent effective refractive index. For a static, spherically symmetric background the graviton fluctuations induce a vacuum structure which causes birefringence in the propagation of light.Comment: 15 pages, revte

    Scharnhorst effect at oblique incidence

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    We consider the Scharnhorst effect (anomalous photon propagation in the Casimir vacuum) at oblique incidence, calculating both photon speed and polarization states as functions of angle. The analysis is performed in the framework of nonlinear electrodynamics and we show that many features of the situation can be extracted solely on the basis of symmetry considerations. Although birefringence is common in nonlinear electrodynamics it is not universal; in particular we verify that the Casimir vacuum is not birefringent at any incidence angle. On the other hand, group velocity is typically not equal to phase velocity, though the distinction vanishes for special directions or if one is only working to second order in the fine structure constant. We obtain an ``effective metric'' that is subtly different from previous results. The disagreement is due to the way that ``polarization sums'' are implemented in the extant literature, and we demonstrate that a fully consistent polarization sum must be implemented via a bootstrap procedure using the effective metric one is attempting to define. Furthermore, in the case of birefringence, we show that the polarization sum technique is intrinsically an approximation.Comment: 11 pages double-column format, 2 figures, RevTeX 4.0 (beta 2). Final versio

    Ekstrak Virgin Coconut Oil Sebagai Sumber Pangan Fungsional

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    Virgin Coconut Oil (VCO) merupakan salah satu jenis minyak nabati yang dapat bermanfaat dari aspek medis dan nutrisi karena dapat mencegah dan membantu mengobati penyakit tertentu serta dapat mempermudah proses pencernaan makanan dan penyerapan gizi. VCO dapat bertindak sebagai antioksidan dan antifotooksidan yang disebabkan oleh kandungan komponen minor (mikronutrien). Tujuan penelitian ini adalah mengekstrak komponen minor VCO menjadi produk untuk pangan fungsional yang mampu berperan sebagai antioksidan dan mengetahui peran VCO sebagai antiradikal bebas secara in vitro. Penelitian ini menggunakan metode eksperimental dengan 3 tahap yaitu: 1. Ekstraksi VCO menggunakan pelarut etanol dan metanol, 2. Pengujian penangkapan radikal bebas ekstrak VCO secara in vitro dengan metode 1,1-difenil-2-pikrilhidrazil (DPPH), 3. Identifikasi dan pengujian komponen kimia pada ekstrak VCO, identifikasi dan pengujian komponen minor pada ekstrak VCO dengan menggunakan High Performance Liquid Chromatography (HPLC). Hasil penelitian ini menunjukkan bahwa rendemen ekstrak VCO semakin tinggi dengan semakin tingginya persentase pelarut, ekstraksi dengan menggunakan etanol menghasilkan rendemen ekstrak yang lebih tinggi dibanding dengan menggunakan metanol. Aktivitas antioksidan dan kandungan total tokoferol dari ekstrak VCO semakin tinggi dengan semakin tingginya persentase pelarut yang digunakan. Salah satu senyawa tokoferol yang terdapat dalam VCO adalah -tokoferol. Berdasarkan analisa statistik menunjukkan bahwa etanol dan metanol menghasilkan sifat kimia ekstrak yang relatif sama, sehingga dapat direkomendasikan bahwa untuk mengekstraksi komponen minor dari VCO dapat menggunakan etanol karena di samping aman dari aspek kesehatan juga dapat menghasilkan rendemen ekstrak yang lebih tinggi

    Geometrical aspects of light propagation in nonlinear electrodynamics

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    We analyze the propagation of light in the context of nonlinear electrodynamics, as it occurs in modified QED vacua. We show that the corresponding characteristic equation can be described in terms of a modification of the effective geometry of the underlying spacetime structure. We present the general form for this effective geometry and exhibit some new consequences that result from such approach.Comment: LaTex, 11 pages, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.

    Towards a transportable aluminium ion quantum logic optical clock

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    With the advent of optical clocks featuring fractional frequency uncertainties on the order of 10-17 and below, new applications such as chronometric leveling with few-centimeter height resolution emerge. We are developing a transportable optical clock based on a single trapped aluminum ion, which is interrogated via quantum logic spectroscopy. We employ singly charged calcium as the logic ion for sympathetic cooling, state preparation, and readout. Here, we present a simple and compact physics and laser package for manipulation of 40Ca+. Important features are a segmented multilayer trap with separate loading and probing zones, a compact titanium vacuum chamber, a near-diffraction-limited imaging system with high numerical aperture based on a single biaspheric lens, and an all-in-fiber 40Ca+ repump laser system. We present preliminary estimates of the trap-induced frequency shifts on 27Al+, derived from measurements with a single calcium ion. The micromotion-induced second-order Doppler shift for 27Al+ has been determined to be ÎŽÎœEMMÎœ=-0.4-0.3 +0.4×10-18 and the black-body radiation shift is ÎŽÎœBBR/Îœ = (-4.0 ± 0.4) × 10-18. Moreover, heating rates of 30 (7) quanta per second at trap frequencies of ωrad,Ca+ ≈ 2π × 2.5 MHz (ωax,Ca+ ≈ 2π × 1.5 MHz) in radial (axial) direction have been measured, enabling interrogation times of a few hundreds of milliseconds

    Light propagation in non-trivial QED vacua

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    Within the framework of effective action QED, we derive the light cone condition for homogeneous non-trivial QED vacua in the geometric optics approximation. Our result generalizes the ``unified formula'' suggested by Latorre, Pascual and Tarrach and allows for the calculation of velocity shifts and refractive indices for soft photons travelling through these vacua. Furthermore, we clarify the connection between the light velocity shift and the scale anomaly. This study motivates the introduction of a so-called effective action charge that characterizes the velocity modifying properties of the vacuum. Several applications are given concerning vacuum modifications caused by, e.g., strong fields, Casimir systems and high temperature.Comment: 13 pages, REVTeX, 3 figures, to appear in Phys. Rev.

    The Metabolic Health Index Identifies Patients That Will Benefit From Metabolic Surgery

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    Introduction: Metabolic syndrome is a modern world's major health hazard related to comorbidities like type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease. Bariatric surgery is well known to lower this health risk in patients with obesity. There is a need for an objective measure to assess the intended reduction in health hazard and indirectly the eligibility for bariatric surgery. The Metabolic Health Index (MHI) quantitatively summarizes the cumulative impact of the metabolic syndrome on health status on a scale from 1 to 6. This study describes the use of the MHI as a supportive tool in the decision for and outcome assessment of bariatric surgery. Methods: The general usability of the MHI was tested by extending its application to patient data of five other bariatric centers in the Netherlands. Retrospective laboratory and national bariatric quality registry data of 11,501 patients were collected. Results: The quantification of (improvement in) metabolic health burden as measured by the MHI was independent of the dataset that was used to derive the MHI model. Patients with MHI &gt; 2.8 prior to surgery improved significantly more in MHI 12 mo after surgery compared to patients with MHI ≀ 2.8 (1.1 compared to 0.4 MHI points, respectively; P &lt; 0.001). Conclusions: The MHI is robust between centers and is suitable for general use in clinical decision-making. As changes in MHI over time reflect metabolic health alterations, it is suitable as an outcome measure of surgery. An MHI cut-off value of 2.8 helps to predict the likelihood of significant improvement after surgery, independent of body mass index and known metabolic comorbidities.</p
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