8,888 research outputs found
Transient behavior of surface plasmon polaritons scattered at a subwavelength groove
We present a numerical study and analytical model of the optical near-field
diffracted in the vicinity of subwavelength grooves milled in silver surfaces.
The Green's tensor approach permits computation of the phase and amplitude
dependence of the diffracted wave as a function of the groove geometry. It is
shown that the field diffracted along the interface by the groove is equivalent
to replacing the groove by an oscillating dipolar line source. An analytic
expression is derived from the Green's function formalism, that reproduces well
the asymptotic surface plasmon polariton (SPP) wave as well as the transient
surface wave in the near-zone close to the groove. The agreement between this
model and the full simulation is very good, showing that the transient
"near-zone" regime does not depend on the precise shape of the groove. Finally,
it is shown that a composite diffractive evanescent wave model that includes
the asymptotic SPP can describe the wavelength evolution in this transient
near-zone. Such a semi-analytical model may be useful for the design and
optimization of more elaborate photonic circuits whose behavior in large part
will be controlled by surface waves.Comment: 12 pages, 10 figure
Short-pulse photoassociation in rubidium below the D line
Photoassociation of two ultracold rubidium atoms and the subsequent formation
of stable molecules in the singlet ground and lowest triplet states is
investigated theoretically. The method employs laser pulses inducing
transitions via excited states correlated to the asymptote.
Weakly bound molecules in the singlet ground or lowest triplet state can be
created by a single pulse while the formation of more deeply bound molecules
requires a two-color pump-dump scenario. More deeply bound molecules in the
singlet ground or lowest triplet state can be produced only if efficient
mechanisms for both pump and dump steps exist. While long-range
-potentials allow for efficient photoassociation, stabilization is
facilitated by the resonant spin-orbit coupling of the states.
Molecules in the singlet ground state bound by a few wavenumbers can thus be
formed. This provides a promising first step toward ground state molecules
which are ultracold in both translational and vibrational degrees of freedom
Surface-wave interferometry on single subwavelength slit-groove structures fabricated on gold films
We apply the technique of far-field interferometry to measure the properties
of surface waves generated by two-dimensional (2D) single subwavelength
slit-groove structures on gold films. The effective surface index of refraction
measured for the surface wave propagating over a distance of more than 12
microns is determined to be 1.016 with a measurement uncertainty of 0.004, to
within experimental uncertainty of the expected bound surface plasmon-polariton
(SPP) value for a Au/Air interface of 1.018. We compare these measurements to
finite-difference-time-domain (FDTD) numerical simulations of the optical field
transmission through these devices. We find excellent agreement between the
measurements and the simulations for the surface index of refraction. The
measurements also show that the surface wave propagation parameter exhibits
transient behavior close to the slit, evolving smoothly from greater values
asymptotically toward the value expected for the SPP over the first 2-3 microns
of slit-groove distance. This behavior is confirmed by the FDTD simulations
A mean field description of jamming in non-cohesive frictionless particulate systems
A theory for kinetic arrest in isotropic systems of repulsive,
radially-interacting particles is presented that predicts exponents for the
scaling of various macroscopic quantities near the rigidity transition that are
in agreement with simulations, including the non-trivial shear exponent. Both
statics and dynamics are treated in a simplified, one-particle level
description, and coupled via the assumption that kinetic arrest occurs on the
boundary between mechanically stable and unstable regions of the static
parameter diagram. This suggests the arrested states observed in simulations
are at (or near) an elastic buckling transition. Some additional numerical
evidence to confirm the scaling of microscopic quantities is also provided.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figs; additional clarification of different elastic moduli
exponents, plus typo fix. To appear in PR
Formation of fundamental structures in Bose-Einstein Condensates
The meanfield interaction in a Bose condensate provides a nonlinearity which
can allow stable structures to exist in the meanfield wavefunction. We discuss
a number of examples where condensates, modelled by the one dimensional Gross
Pitaevskii equation, can produce gray solitons and we consider in detail the
case of two identical condensates colliding in a harmonic trap. Solitons are
shown to form from dark interference fringes when the soliton structure,
constrained in a defined manner, has lower energy than the interference fringe
and an analytic expression is given for this condition.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, requires ioplppt.st
Kiloparsec-scale Spatial Offsets in Double-peaked Narrow-line Active Galactic Nuclei. I. Markers for Selection of Compelling Dual Active Galactic Nucleus Candidates
Merger-remnant galaxies with kpc-scale separation dual active galactic nuclei
(AGNs) should be widespread as a consequence of galaxy mergers and triggered
gas accretion onto supermassive black holes, yet very few dual AGNs have been
observed. Galaxies with double-peaked narrow AGN emission lines in the Sloan
Digital Sky Survey are plausible dual AGN candidates, but their double-peaked
profiles could also be the result of gas kinematics or AGN-driven outflows and
jets on small or large scales. To help distinguish between these scenarios, we
have obtained spatial profiles of the AGN emission via follow-up long-slit
spectroscopy of 81 double-peaked narrow-line AGNs in SDSS at 0.03 < z < 0.36
using Lick, Palomar, and MMT Observatories. We find that all 81 systems exhibit
double AGN emission components with ~kpc projected spatial separations on the
sky, which suggests that they are produced by kpc-scale dual AGNs or kpc-scale
outflows, jets, or rotating gaseous disks. In addition, we find that the
subsample (58%) of the objects with spatially compact emission components may
be preferentially produced by dual AGNs, while the subsample (42%) with
spatially extended emission components may be preferentially produced by AGN
outflows. We also find that for 32% of the sample the two AGN emission
components are preferentially aligned with the host galaxy major axis, as
expected for dual AGNs orbiting in the host galaxy potential. Our results both
narrow the list of possible physical mechanisms producing the double AGN
components, and suggest several observational criteria for selecting the most
promising dual AGN candidates from the full sample of double-peaked narrow-line
AGNs. Using these criteria, we determine the 17 most compelling dual AGN
candidates in our sample.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figures, published in ApJ. Modified from original version
to reflect referee's comment
Large Extra Dimensions from a Small Extra Dimension
Models with extra dimensions have changed our understanding of the hierarchy
problem. In general, these models explain the weakness of gravity by diluting
gravity in a large bulk volume, or by localizing the graviton away from the
standard model. In this paper, we show that the warped geometries necessary for
the latter scenario can naturally induce the large volumes necessary for the
former. We present a model in which a large volume is stabilized without
supersymmetry. We comment on the phenomenology of this scenario and
generalizations to additional dimensions.Comment: Some formulae altered, conclusions unchange
Magneto-optical trap for metastable helium at 389 nm
We have constructed a magneto-optical trap (MOT) for metastable triplet
helium atoms utilizing the 2 3S1 -> 3 3P2 line at 389 nm as the trapping and
cooling transition. The far-red-detuned MOT (detuning Delta = -41 MHz)
typically contains few times 10^7 atoms at a relatively high (~10^9 cm^-3)
density, which is a consequence of the large momentum transfer per photon at
389 nm and a small two-body loss rate coefficient (2 * 10^-10 cm^3/s < beta <
1.0 * 10^-9 cm^3/s). The two-body loss rate is more than five times smaller
than in a MOT on the commonly used 2 3S1 -> 2 3P2 line at 1083 nm. Furthermore,
we measure a temperature of 0.46(1) mK, a factor 2.5 lower as compared to the
1083 nm case. Decreasing the detuning to Delta= -9 MHz results in a cloud
temperature as low as 0.25(1) mK, at small number of trapped atoms. The 389 nm
MOT exhibits small losses due to two-photon ionization, which have been
investigated as well.Comment: 11 page
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