84,913 research outputs found

    Observation of Terahertz Radiation via the Two-Color Laser Scheme with Uncommon Frequency Ratios

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    In the widely-studied two-color laser scheme for terahertz (THz) radiation from a gas, the frequency ratio of the two lasers is usually fixed at ω2/ω1=\omega_2/\omega_1=1:2. We investigate THz generation with uncommon frequency ratios. Our experiments show, for the first time, efficient THz generation with new ratios of ω2/ω1=\omega_2/\omega_1=1:4 and 2:3. We observe that the THz polarization can be adjusted by rotating the longer-wavelength laser polarization and the polarization adjustment becomes inefficient by rotating the other laser polarization; the THz energy shows similar scaling laws with different frequency ratios. These observations are inconsistent with multi-wave mixing theory, but support the gas-ionization model. This study pushes the development of the two-color scheme and provides a new dimension to explore the long-standing problem of the THz generation mechanism.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure

    Grain Boundary Softening from Stress Assisted Helium Cavity Coalescence in Ultrafine-Grained Tungsten

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    The formation of helium cavities in coarse-grained materials produces hardening proportional to the number density and size of the cavities and due to the interaction of dislocations with intragranular helium defects. In nanostructured metals containing a high density of interfacial sinks, preferential cavity formation on the grain boundaries instead produces softening and often attributed to enhanced interfacial plasticity. Employing two grades of ultrafine-grained tungsten, we explore this effect using targeted implantation studies to map cavity evolution as a function of the irradiation conditions and quantify its impact on the mechanical response through nanoindentation. Softening is reported at implantation temperatures above the threshold for preferential grain boundary cavity formation but at a sufficiently low fluence prior to the growth of intragranular cavities. Collective changes in the mean cavity size, density, and morphology beneath a residual impression on an implanted surface indicate that cavity coalescence accompanied the reduction in hardness. Complementary atomistic simulations demonstrate that, in tungsten grain structures exhibiting softening, grain boundary bubble coalescence is driven by stress concentrations that further act to localize strain in the grain boundaries through cooperative deformation processes involving local atomic shuffling and sliding, dislocation emission, and even the nucleation of unstable twinning events

    The two emission states of PSR B1534+12

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    We have observed PSR~B1534+12 (J1537+1155), a pulsar with a neutron star companion, using the Five-hundred-meter Aperture Spherical radio Telescope (FAST). We found that this pulsar shows two distinct emission states: a weak state with a wide pulse profile and a burst state with a narrow pulse profile. The weak state is always present. We cannot, with our current data, determine whether the pulse energy of the weak state follows a normal or a log-normal distribution. The burst state energy distribution follows a power-law. The amplitude of the single pulse emission in the burst state varies significantly; the peak flux intensity of the brightest pulse is 334 times stronger than that of the average pulse. We also examined the timing precision achievable using only bright pulses, which showed no demonstrable improvement because of pulse jitter and therefore quantified the jitter noise level for this pulsar.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal Letter
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