83 research outputs found

    Monograph No. 5: Drug law enforcement: The evidence

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    This monograph (No. 05) provides an annotated bibliography of all the relevant drug law enforcement literature. The team at Griffith University have collated and summarised the extant research literature and completed two systematic reviews – a narrative review and a meta-analytic review. These have both been published in peer review journals. This monograph provides the reader with a detailed list of all the published law enforcement literature, broken down into categories of: international/national interventions; reactive/aggressive interventions; proactive/partnership interventions; individualised interventions; and combination of reactive/aggressive & proactive/partnership interventions

    Bulletin No. 4: Review of drug law enforcement interventions

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    The systematic review of police-led law enforcement strategies had three goals: 1. to advance our knowledge regarding effective and ineffective law enforcement interventions; 2. to establish effects of interventions that would inform models (such as agent-based modelling and stocks and flows); and 3. to establish potential interventions for demonstration projects in Stage Two. This is the first systematic review of drug law enforcement strategies to be undertaken with a broad mandate, including those strategies implemented at international, national, state and local levels. It has been endorsed as a Campbell Crime and Justice Group Systematic Review (see http://www.aic.gov.au/campbellcj/reviews/published.html)

    Monolithic InP-Based Grating Spectrometer for Wavelength-Division Multiplexed Systems at 1.5 ÎŒm

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    A monolithic InP-based grating spectrometer for use in wavelength-division multiplexed systems at 1.5 ÎŒm is reported. The spectrometer uses a single etched reflective focusing diffraction grating and resolves >50 channels at 1 nm spacing with a ~0.3nm channel width and at least 19dB channel isolation. Operation is essentially of the state of the input polarisation

    Fast high-efficiency integrated waveguide photodetectors using novel hybrid vertical/butt coupling geometry

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    We report a novel coupling geometry for integrated waveguide photodetectors−a hybrid vertical coupling/butt coupling scheme that allows the integration of fast, efficient, photodetectors with conventional double heterostructure waveguides. It can be employed to yield a planar, or pseudo-planar, surface that supports further levels of integration. The approach is demonstrated with a 25-”m-long p-i-n detector integrated with an InP/InGaAsP/InP waveguide, which displays a high (~90%) efficiency and large (~15 GHz) bandwidth. This is the fastest high-efficiency integrated waveguide photodetector reported to date

    Wavelength-selectable laser emission from a multistripe array grating integrated cavity laser

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    We report laser operation of a multistripe array grating integrated cavity (MAGIC) laser in which the wavelength of the emission from a single output stripe is chosen by selectively injection pumping a second stripe. We demonstrate a device that lases in the 1.5 ”m fiber band at 15 wavelengths, evenly spaced by ~2 nm. The single-output/wavelength-selectable operation, together with the accurate predefinition of the lasing wavelengths, makes the MAGIC laser a very attractive candidate for use in multiwavelength networks

    Ultracompact monolithic integration of balanced, polarization diversity photodetectors for coherent lightwave receivers

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    The authors have monolithically integrated an optical front-end on InP for balanced, polarization-diversity coherent lightwave reception which is only 1.3-mm long. Low on-chip insertion loss (<4.5 dB) and balanced photoresponse (1.05:1 or better) are achieved at 1.5-ÎŒm wavelength using straightforward, regrowth-free fabrication. Low-capacitance photodetectors (≀0.15 pF) are employed for high bandwidth operation

    WDM Detection Using Integrated Grating Demultiplexer And High Density p-i-n Array

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    Multi-wavelength systems are being advocated for use in future telecommunication networks and for computer processor links. In research systems the multiplexing and demultiplexing of the different wavelength signals is currently achieved through the use of bulk optical components. When channel separation are on the order of a nm or so - which is typical of 'high density' direct detection systems - the MUX/DMUX function is generally done with a diffraction grating. WDM detection at the receiver end is then obtained by assembling a detector array, placed in the focal plane of the optical grating system

    Spectrometer on a chip: InP-based integrated grating spectrograph for wavelength-multiplexed optical processing

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    We report the performance of an InP-based integrated spectrometer and consider its application in wavelength division multiplexed (WDM) systems. The wavelength multiplexer/demultiplexer operates in the 1.5 micrometers fiber band and disperses 1 nm spaced signals over a spectral range of 75 nm. Crosstalk between the channels is -19 dB and the optical performance of the spectrometer is essentially insensitive to the polarization of the incident light. Use of the device in multiwavelength telecommunication and computer local area networks is discussed

    Spectrometer On A Chip: An InP-based Grating Demultiplexer For WDM Applications At 1.5ÎŒm

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    We report an InP-based grating spectrometer for WDM systems operating in the 1.5”m fiber band. The spectrometer resolves more than 50 wavelength demultiplexed channels at 1mm spacing with a 3Λ channel width and at least 19dB isolation between outputs. The spectrometer operation is almost independent of the state of the input polarization
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