392 research outputs found
Alien Registration- Oulton, Allan W. (Bath, Sagadahoc County)
https://digitalmaine.com/alien_docs/8836/thumbnail.jp
Double Resonance Nanolaser based on Coupled Slit-hole Resonator Structures
This work investigates a kind of metallic magnetic cavity based on slit-hole
resonators (SHRs). Two orthogonal hybrid magnetic resonance modes of the cavity
with a large spatial overlap are predesigned at the wavelengths of 980 nm and
1550 nm. The Yb-Er co-doped material serving as a gain medium is set in the
cavity; this enables the resonator to have high optical activity. The numerical
result shows that the strong lasing at 1550 nm may be achieved when the cavity
array is pumped at 980 nm. This double resonance nanolaser array has potential
applications in future optical devices and quantum information techniques.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures, http://www.dsl.nju.edu/mp
Optics of cone photoreceptors in the chicken (Gallus gallus domesticus)
Vision is the primary sensory modality of birds, and its importance is evident in the sophistication of their visual systems. Coloured oil droplets in the cone photoreceptors represent an adaptation in the avian retina, acting as long-pass colour filters. However, we currently lack understanding of how the optical properties and morphology of component structures (e.g. oil droplet, mitochondrial ellipsoid and outer segment) of the cone photoreceptor influence the transmission of light into the outer segment and the ultimate effect they have on receptor sensitivity. In this study, we use data from microspectrophotometry, digital holographic microscopy and electron microscopy to inform electromagnetic models of avian cone photoreceptors to quantitatively investigate the integrated optical function of the cell. We find that pigmented oil droplets primarily function as spectral filters, not light collection devices, although the mitochondrial ellipsoid improves optical coupling between the inner segment and oil droplet. In contrast, unpigmented droplets found in violet-sensitive cones double sensitivity at its peak relative to other cone types. Oil droplets and ellipsoids both narrow the angular sensitivity of single cone photoreceptors, but not as strongly as those in human cones
'Against the World': Michael Field, female marriage and the aura of amateurism'
This article considers the case of Katherine Bradley and Edith Cooper, an aunt and niece who lived and wrote together as âMichael Fieldâ in the fin-de-siĂšcle Aesthetic movement. Bradleyâs bold statement that she and Cooper were âcloser marriedâ than the Brownings forms the basis for a discussion of their partnership in terms of a âfemale marriageâ, a union that is reflected, as I will argue, in the pages of their writings. However, Michael Fieldâs exclusively collaborative output, though extensive, was no guarantee for success. On the contrary, their case illustrates the notion, valid for most products of co-authorship, that the jointly written work is always surrounded by an aura of amateurism. Since collaboration defied the ingrained notion of the author as the solitary producer of his or her work, critics and readers have time and again attempted to âparseâ the collaboration by dissecting the co-authored work into its constituent halves, a treatment that the Fields too failed to escape
Advances in small lasers
M.T.H was supported by an Australian Research council Future Fellowship research grant for this work. M.C.G. is grateful to the Scottish Funding Council (via SUPA) for financial support.Small lasers have dimensions or modes sizes close to or smaller than the wavelength of emitted light. In recent years there has been significant progress towards reducing the size and improving the characteristics of these devices. This work has been led primarily by the innovative use of new materials and cavity designs. This Review summarizes some of the latest developments, particularly in metallic and plasmonic lasers, improvements in small dielectric lasers, and the emerging area of small bio-compatible or bio-derived lasers. We examine the different approaches employed to reduce size and how they result in significant differences in the final device, particularly between metal- and dielectric-cavity lasers. We also present potential applications for the various forms of small lasers, and indicate where further developments are required.PostprintPeer reviewe
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