1,095 research outputs found
Universal Borromean Binding in Spin-Orbit Coupled Ultracold Fermi Gases
Borromean rings and Borromean binding, a class of intriguing phenomena as
three objects are linked (bound) together while any two of them are unlinked
(unbound), widely exist in nature and have been found in systems of biology,
chemistry and physics. Previous studies have suggested that the occurrence of
such a binding in physical systems typically relies on the microscopic details
of pairwise interaction potentials at short-range, and is therefore
non-universal. Here, we report a new type of Borromean binding in ultracold
Fermi gases with Rashba spin-orbit coupling, which is {\it universal} against
short-range interaction details, with its binding energy only dependent on the
s-wave scattering length and the spin-orbit coupling strength. We show that the
occurrence of this universal Borromean binding is facilitated by the symmetry
of the single-particle dispersion under spin-orbit coupling, and is therefore
{\it symmetry-selective} rather than interaction-selective. The state is robust
over a wide range of mass ratio between composing fermions, which are
accessible by Li-Li, K-K and K-Li mixtures in cold atoms experiments. Our
results reveal the importance of symmetry factor in few-body physics, and shed
light on the emergence of new quantum phases in a many-body system with exotic
few-body correlations.Comment: 6+1.5 pages, 5 figures, published versio
Shear and effective elongational rheology and polymer molecular characteristics
Extensional deformations play a significant role in many processing operations which involve a rapid change of shape such as fiber spinning, film blowing, blow molding, and nonwoven melt processing. To develop real time, online process and quality control analysis in these operations, know ledge of the molecular weight (MW) and molecular weight distribution (MWD}, effects of molecular characteristics and processing con9itions on the elongational rheology, and orientation of polymeric materials in these operations is essential. In this work, shear rheology of six polyethylenes (PE}, one polyisobutylene (PIB}, and _five cellulose solutions was measured at different temperatures using a rotational rheometer. Effective elongational viscosity of polyethylenes and polyisobutylene was also measured at different Hencky strains and temperatures using a capillary rheometer by replacing the capillary cylindrical die with a hyperbolic converging die. The hyperbolic shape of the dies establishes a purely elongational flow field at a constant elongational strain rate throughout the die. The effect of molecular characteristics such as MW, MWD, and long chain branches and the processing conditions such as temperature and Hencky strain on the elongational rheology of PE and PIB samples was studied. The results from the hyperbolic dies were compared with results from other techniques, namely Rheometrics Extensional Rheometer (RER) and Elongational Rheometer for Melts (RMB). Good master curves were generated for the temperature and Hencky strain shifting, and simultaneous shifting with respect to both temperature and Hencky strain. The enthalpy and entropy changes were calculated from the effective elongational and shear viscosities to investigate flow induced orientation of the polymer melts in hyperbolic dies. The enthalpy and entropy changes increase in magnitude with higher elongational strain rate and higher Hencky strain. The storage and loss moduli were used to determine and test the three parameters needed to predict the MW and MWD
Orientation-dependent bending properties of selectively-filled photonic crystal fibres
A selective-filling technique was demonstrated to improve the optical properties of photonic crystal fibres (PCFs). Such a technique can be used to fill one or more fluid samples selectively into desired air holes. The technique is based on drilling a hole or carving a groove on the surface of a PCF to expose selected air holes to atmosphere by the use of a micromachining system comprising of a femtosecond infrared laser and a microscope. The exposed section was immersed into a fluid and the air holes are then filled through the well-known capillarity action [1, 2]. Provided two or more grooves are fabricated on different locations and different orientation along the fibre surface, different fluids may be filled into different air-holes to form a hybrid fibre. As an example, we filled half of a pure-silica PCF by a fluid with n=1.480 by carving a rectangular groove on the fibre (Figure 1). Consequently, the half-filled PCF became a bandgap-guiding structure (upper half), resulted from a higher refractive index in the fluid rods than in the fibre core [3], and three bandgaps were observed within the wavelength range from 600 to 1700 nm. Whereas, the lower half (unfilled holes) of the fibre remains an air/silica index-guiding structure (Figure 1(b)). When the hybrid PCF is bent, its bandgaps gradually narrowed, resulted from the shifts of the bandgap edges. The bandgap edges had distinct bend-sensitivities when the hybrid PCF was bent toward different directions. Especially, the bandgaps are hardly affected when the half-filled PCF was bent toward the fluid-filled region. Such unique bend properties could be used to monitor simultaneously the bend directions and the curvature of the engineering structures
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