793 research outputs found
Bounds and Inequalities Relating h-Index, g-Index, e-Index and Generalized Impact Factor
Finding relationships among different indices such as h-index, g-index,
e-index, and generalized impact factor is a challenging task. In this paper, we
describe some bounds and inequalities relating h-index, g-index, e-index, and
generalized impact factor. We derive the bounds and inequalities relating these
indexing parameters from their basic definitions and without assuming any
continuous model to be followed by any of them.Comment: 17 pages, 6 figures, 5 table
Raman cooling and heating of two trapped Ba+ ions
We study cooling of the collective vibrational motion of two 138Ba+ ions
confined in an electrodynamic trap and irradiated with laser light close to the
resonances S_1/2-P_1/2 (493 nm) and P_1/2-D_3/2 (650 nm). The motional state of
the ions is monitored by a spatially resolving photo multiplier. Depending on
detuning and intensity of the cooling lasers, macroscopically different
motional states corresponding to different ion temperatures are observed. We
also derive the ions' temperature from detailed analytical calculations of
laser cooling taking into account the Zeeman structure of the energy levels
involved. The observed motional states perfectly match the calculated
temperatures. Significant heating is observed in the vicinity of the dark
resonances of the Zeeman-split S_1/2-D_3/2 Raman transitions. Here two-photon
processes dominate the interaction between lasers and ions. Parameter regimes
of laser light are identified that imply most efficient laser cooling.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure
Back to the roots of "channel three"
Rotationally resolved fluorescence excitation and resonance enhanced multiphoton ionization (MPI) spectra of the 610130 one-photon band of benzene at the onset of ``channel three'' are reported. The fluorescence decay is monitored after rotationally selected excitation and a large variation of the nonradiative decay time (<1 to 6.8 ns) is found for the different rotational states at the vibrational excess energy of 3287 cm−1 in S1. The rotational structure of the fluorescence excitation spectrum and the MPI spectrum measured with delayed laser pulses differ considerably. All observed lines of the MPI spectrum were assigned and the rotational line structure can only be understood with a model which incorporates interference between different decay channels. Due to this interference, particular rotational states decay fairly slowly and give rise to lines in the spectrum while states with neighboring rotational quantum numbers decay rapidly and are therefore not found in the spectrum. The previously reported drastic increase of the electronic, nonradiative decay of benzene in this region of excess energy, which led to the postulation of ``channel three,'' cannot be confirmed. Instead, the optically excited rovibronic states are thought to be coupled to background states within S1 which are themselves broadened due to strong coupling to the highly excited S0 electronic state rather than due to an unknown (``channel three'') or isomerization process. The Journal of Chemical Physics is copyrighted by The American Institute of Physics
Motional sidebands and direct measurement of the cooling rate in the resonance fluorescence of a single trapped ion
Resonance fluorescence of a single trapped ion is spectrally analyzed using a
heterodyne technique. Motional sidebands due to the oscillation of the ion in
the harmonic trap potential are observed in the fluorescence spectrum. From the
width of the sidebands the cooling rate is obtained and found to be in
agreement with the theoretical prediction.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures. Final version after minor changes, 1 figure
replaced; to be published in PRL, July 10, 200
Generation of spatial antibunching with free propagating twin beams
We propose and implement a novel method to produce a spatial anti-bunched
field with free propagating twin beams from spontaneous parametric
down-conversion. The method consists in changing the spatial propagation by
manipulating the transverse degrees of freedom through reflections of one of
the twin beams. Our method use reflective elements eliminating losses from
absorption by the objects inserted in the beams.Comment: Submitted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Monitoring of oxidative and metabolic stress during cardiac surgery by means of breath biomarkers: an observational study
Research articl
Angle-resolved photoemission study and first principles calculation of the electronic structure of GaTe
The electronic band structure of GaTe has been calculated by numerical atomic
orbitals density-functional theory, in the local density approximation. In
addition, the valence-band dispersion along various directions of the GaTe
Brillouin zone has been determined experimentally by angle-resolved
photoelectron spectroscopy. Along these directions, the calculated valence-band
structure is in good concordance with the valence-band dispersion obtained by
these measurements. It has been established that GaTe is a direct-gap
semiconductor with the band gap located at the Z point, that is, at Brillouin
zone border in the direction perpendicular to the layers. The valence-band
maximum shows a marked \textit{p}-like behavior, with a pronounced anion
contribution. The conduction band minimum arises from states with a comparable
\textit{s}- \textit{p}-cation and \textit{p}-anion orbital contribution.
Spin-orbit interaction appears to specially alter dispersion and binding energy
of states of the topmost valence bands lying at . By spin-orbit, it is
favored hybridization of the topmost \textit{p}-valence band with deeper
and flatter \textit{p}-\textit{p} bands and the valence-band minimum at
is raised towards the Fermi level since it appears to be determined by
the shifted up \textit{p}-\textit{p} bands.Comment: 7 text pages, 6 eps figures, submitted to PR
Direct sampling of the Susskind-Glogower phase distributions
Coarse-grained phase distributions are introduced that approximate to the
Susskind--Glogower cosine and sine phase distributions. The integral relations
between the phase distributions and the phase-parametrized field-strength
distributions observable in balanced homodyning are derived and the integral
kernels are analyzed. It is shown that the phase distributions can be directly
sampled from the field-strength distributions which offers the possibility of
measuring the Susskind--Glogower cosine and sine phase distributions with
sufficiently well accuracy. Numerical simulations are performed to demonstrate
the applicability of the method.Comment: 10 figures using a4.st
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