5 research outputs found
Diffusion in a Granular Fluid - Theory
Many important properties of granular fluids can be represented by a system
of hard spheres with inelastic collisions. Traditional methods of
nonequilibrium statistical mechanics are effective for analysis and description
of the inelastic case as well. This is illustrated here for diffusion of an
impurity particle in a fluid undergoing homogeneous cooling. An appropriate
scaling of the Liouville equation is described such that the homogeneous
cooling ensemble and associated time correlation functions map to those of a
stationary state. In this form the familiar methods of linear response can be
applied, leading to Green - Kubo and Einstein representations of diffusion in
terms of the velocity and mean square displacement correlation functions. These
correlation functions are evaluated approximately using a cumulant expansion
and from kinetic theory, providing the diffusion coefficient as a function of
the density and the restitution coefficients. Comparisons with results from
molecular dynamics simulation are given in the following companion paper
High Speed and High Efficiency Travelling Wave Single-Photon Detectors Embedded in Nanophotonic Circuits
Ultrafast, high quantum efficiency single photon detectors are among the most
sought-after elements in modern quantum optics and quantum communication. High
photon detection efficiency is essential for scalable measurement-based quantum
computation, quantum key distribution, and loophole-free Bell experiments.
However, imperfect modal matching and finite photon absorption rates have
usually limited the maximum attainable detection efficiency of single photon
detectors. Here we demonstrate a superconducting nanowire detector atop
nanophotonic waveguides which allows us to drastically increase the absorption
length for incoming photons. When operating the detectors close to the critical
current we achieve high on-chip single photon detection efficiency up to 91% at
telecom wavelengths, with uncertainty dictated by the variation of the
waveguide photon flux. We also observe remarkably low dark count rates without
significant compromise of detection efficiency. Furthermore, our detectors are
fully embedded in a scalable silicon photonic circuit and provide ultrashort
timing jitter of 18ps. Exploiting this high temporal resolution we demonstrate
ballistic photon transport in silicon ring resonators. The direct
implementation of such a detector with high quantum efficiency, high detection
speed and low jitter time on chip overcomes a major barrier in integrated
quantum photonics
Bacterial defluorination of 4-fluoroglutamic acid
Fluorinated amino acids are used as enzyme inhibitors, mechanistic probes and in the production of pharmacologically active peptides. Because enantiomerically pure 4-fluoroglutamate is difficult to prepare, the selective degradation of the l-isomer is a potentially convenient method of obtaining d-4-fluoroglutamate from the racemate. In this paper, we describe our investigations on the degradation of 4-fluoroglutamate by bacteria. Fluoride ion was detected in resting-cell cultures of a number of bacteria that were incubated with racemic 4-fluoroglutamate. Analysis of the culture supernatants by chiral gas chromatography–mass spectrometry revealed that only the l-isomer was degraded. The degradation of 4-fluoroglutamate was also examined in cell-free extracts of Streptomyces cattleya and Proteus mirabilis, and it was observed that equimolar concentrations of fluoride ion and ammonia were generated. The activity was located in the soluble fraction of cell extracts, thus is not related to the l-2-amino-4-chloro-4-pentenoic acid dehydrochlorinase previously identified in membrane fractions of P. mirabilis.Other funderEnterprise Irelan