2,172 research outputs found
Photon Pair Generation in Silicon Micro-Ring Resonator with Reverse Bias Enhancement
Photon sources are fundamental components for any quantum photonic
technology. The ability to generate high count-rate and low-noise correlated
photon pairs via spontaneous parametric down-conversion using bulk crystals has
been the cornerstone of modern quantum optics. However, future practical
quantum technologies will require a scalable integration approach, and
waveguide-based photon sources with high-count rate and low-noise
characteristics will be an essential part of chip-based quantum technologies.
Here, we demonstrate photon pair generation through spontaneous four-wave
mixing in a silicon micro-ring resonator, reporting a maximum
coincidence-to-accidental (CAR) ratio of 602 (+-) 37, and a maximum photon pair
generation rate of 123 MHz (+-) 11 KHz. To overcome free-carrier related
performance degradations we have investigated reverse biased p-i-n structures,
demonstrating an improvement in the pair generation rate by a factor of up to
2, with negligible impact on CAR.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Rotating Convection in an Anisotropic System
We study the stability of patterns arising in rotating convection in weakly
anisotropic systems using a modified Swift-Hohenberg equation. The anisotropy,
either an endogenous characteristic of the system or induced by external
forcing, can stabilize periodic rolls in the K\"uppers-Lortz chaotic regime.
For the particular case of rotating convection with time-modulated rotation
where recently, in experiment, chiral patterns have been observed in otherwise
K\"uppers-Lortz-unstable regimes, we show how the underlying base-flow breaks
the isotropy, thereby affecting the linear growth-rate of convection rolls in
such a way as to stabilize spirals and targets. Throughout we compare
analytical results to numerical simulations of the Swift-Hohenberg equation
Manipulating the quantum information of the radial modes of trapped ions: Linear phononics, entanglement generation, quantum state transmission and non-locality tests
We present a detailed study on the possibility of manipulating quantum
information encoded in the "radial" modes of arrays of trapped ions (i.e., in
the ions' oscillations orthogonal to the trap's main axis). In such systems,
because of the tightness of transverse confinement, the radial modes pertaining
to different ions can be addressed individually. In the first part of the paper
we show that, if local control of the radial trapping frequencies is available,
any linear optical and squeezing operation on the locally defined modes - on
single as well as on many modes - can be reproduced by manipulating the
frequencies. Then, we proceed to describe schemes apt to generate unprecedented
degrees of bipartite and multipartite continuous variable entanglement under
realistic noisy working conditions, and even restricting only to a global
control of the trapping frequencies. Furthermore, we consider the transmission
of the quantum information encoded in the radial modes along the array of ions,
and show it to be possible to a remarkable degree of accuracy, for both
finite-dimensional and continuous variable quantum states. Finally, as an
application, we show that the states which can be generated in this setting
allow for the violation of multipartite non-locality tests, by feasible
displaced parity measurements. Such a demonstration would be a first test of
quantum non-locality for "massive" degrees of freedom (i.e., for degrees of
freedom describing the motion of massive particles).Comment: 21 pages; this paper, presenting a far more extensive and detailed
analysis, completely supersedes arXiv:0708.085
Planning, implementation and scientific goals of the Studies of Emissions and Atmospheric Composition, Clouds and Climate Coupling by Regional Surveys (SEAC4RS) field mission
The Studies of Emissions and Atmospheric Composition, Clouds and Climate Coupling by Regional Surveys (SEAC4RS) field mission based at Ellington Field, Texas, during August and September 2013 employed the most comprehensive airborne payload to date to investigate atmospheric composition over North America. The NASA ER-2, DC-8, and SPEC Inc. Learjet flew 57 science flights from the surface to 20 km. The ER-2 employed seven remote sensing instruments as a satellite surrogate and eight in situ instruments. The DC-8 employed 23 in situ and five remote sensing instruments for radiation, chemistry, and microphysics. The Learjet used 11 instruments to explore cloud microphysics. SEAC4RS launched numerous balloons, augmented AErosol RObotic NETwork, and collaborated with many existing ground measurement sites. Flights investigating convection included close coordination of all three aircraft. Coordinated DC-8 and ER-2 flights investigated the optical properties of aerosols, the influence of aerosols on clouds, and the performance of new instruments for satellite measurements of clouds and aerosols. ER-2 sorties sampled stratospheric injections of water vapor and other chemicals by local and distant convection. DC-8 flights studied seasonally evolving chemistry in the Southeastern U.S., atmospheric chemistry with lower emissions of NOx and SO2 than in previous decades, isoprene chemistry under high and low NOx conditions at different locations, organic aerosols, air pollution near Houston and in petroleum fields, smoke from wildfires in western forests and from agricultural fires in the Mississippi Valley, and the ways in which the chemistry in the boundary layer and the upper troposphere were influenced by vertical transport in convective clouds
The Missing Luminous Blue Variables and the Bistability Jump
We discuss an interesting feature of the distribution of luminous blue
variables on the H-R diagram, and we propose a connection with the bistability
jump in the winds of early-type supergiants. There appears to be a deficiency
of quiescent LBVs on the S Dor instability strip at luminosities between log
L/Lsun = 5.6 and 5.8. The upper boundary, is also where the
temperature-dependent S Dor instability strip intersects the bistability jump
at about 21,000 K. Due to increased opacity, winds of early-type supergiants
are slower and denser on the cool side of the bistability jump, and we
postulate that this may trigger optically-thick winds that inhibit quiescent
LBVs from residing there. We conduct numerical simulations of radiation-driven
winds for a range of temperatures, masses, and velocity laws at log L/Lsun=5.7
to see what effect the bistability jump should have. We find that for
relatively low stellar masses the increase in wind density at the bistability
jump leads to the formation of a modest to strong pseudo photosphere -- enough
to make an early B-type star appear as a yellow hypergiant. Thus, the proposed
mechanism will be most relevant for LBVs that are post-red supergiants. Yellow
hypergiants like IRC+10420 and rho Cas occupy the same luminosity range as the
``missing'' LBVs, and show apparent temperature variations at constant
luminosity. If these yellow hypergiants do eventually become Wolf-Rayet stars,
we speculate that they may skip the normal LBV phase, at least as far as their
apparent positions on the HR diagram are concerned.Comment: 20 pages, 4 figs, accepted by Ap
Phase II trial of standard versus increased transfusion volume in Ugandan children with acute severe anemia.
BACKGROUND: Severe anemia (SA, hemoglobin 6 g/dl: primary outcome) and 28-day survival. RESULTS: Median admission hemoglobin was 4.2 g/dl (IQR 3.1 to 4.9). Initial volume received followed the randomization strategy in 155 (97%) patients. By 24-hours, 70 (90%) children in the Tx30 arm had corrected SA compared to 61 (74%) in the Tx20 arm; cause-specific hazard ratio = 1.54 (95% confidence interval 1.09 to 2.18, P = 0.01). From admission to day 28 there was a greater hemoglobin increase from enrollment in Tx30 (global P <0.0001). Serious adverse events included one non-fatal allergic reaction and one death in the Tx30 arm. There were six deaths in the Tx20 arm (P = 0.12); three deaths were adjudicated as possibly related to transfusion, but none secondary to volume overload. CONCLUSION: A higher initial transfusion volume prescribed at hospital admission was safe and resulted in an accelerated hematological recovery in Ugandan children with SA. Future testing in a large, pragmatic clinical trial to establish the effect on short and longer-term survival is warranted. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.Gov identifier: NCT01461590 registered 26 October 2011
Modelling, optimisation and decision support using the grid
Modelling, Optimisation and Decision Support tools are vital in most areas of engineering. As part of the Distributed Aircraft Maintenance Environment (DAME) e-Science project, a virtual “work-bench” has been developed that can aid the engineer in solving engineering design problems. While the problem that motivated the development of these tools was taken from the aerospace industry, this sort of approach has broader application in areas such as automotive and marine engineering, as well as in the medical industry
Networked but Commodified: The (Dis)Embeddedness of Digital Labour in the Gig Economy
This article investigates the (dis)embeddedness of digital labour within the remote gig economy. We use interview and survey data to highlight how platform workers in Southeast Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa are normatively disembedded from social protections through a process of commodification. Normative disembeddedness leaves workers exposed to the vagaries of the external labour market due to an absence of labour regulations and rights. It also endangers social reproduction by limiting access to healthcare and requiring workers to engage in significant unpaid ‘work-for-labour’. However, we show that these workers are also simultaneously embedded within interpersonal networks of trust, which enable the work to be completed despite the low-trust nature of the gig economy. In bringing together the concepts of normative and network embeddedness, we reconnect the two sides of Polanyi’s thinking and demonstrate the value of an integrated understanding of Polanyi’s approach to embeddedness for understanding contemporary economic transformations
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