14,116 research outputs found
Functional Renormalization for Chiral and U_A(1) Symmetries at Finite Temperature
We investigated the chiral symmetry and U_A(1) anomaly at finite temperature
by applying the functional renormalization group to the SU(3) linear sigma
model. Expanding the local potential around the classical fields, we derived
the flow equations for the renormalization parameters. In chiral limit, the
flow equation for the chiral condensate is decoupled from the others and can be
analytically solved. The Goldstone theorem is guaranteed in vacuum and at
finite temperature, and the two phase transitions for the chiral and U_A(1)
symmetry restoration happen at the same critical temperature. In general case
with explicit chiral symmetry breaking, the two symmetries are partially and
slowly restored, and the scalar and pseudoscalar meson masses are controlled by
the restoration in the limit of high temperature.Comment: 9 pages, 9figure
Double active region index-guided semiconductor laser
A buried crescent InGaAsP/InP laser with a double active layer was fabricated. The laser showed very high characteristic temperature T0 and highly nonlinear light versus current characteristics. A theoretical model using a rate equation approach showed good agreement with the experimental results
Double-active-layer index-guided InGaAsP-InP laser diode
A buried crescent InGaAsP-InP laser with two active layers was fabricated to study the temperature behavior of the double-carrier-confinement structure. An anomalously high characteristic temperature T0 was measured, and optical switching behavior was observed. A mode analysis and numerical calculation using a rate equation approach explained qualitatively very well the experimental results. It was revealed that both the Auger recombination in this special double-active-layer configuration and the temperature-dependent leakage current, which leads to uniform carrier distribution in both active regions, are essential to increase T0
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Optimization of cool roof and night ventilation in office buildings: A case study in Xiamen, China
Increasing roof albedo (using a “cool” roof) and night ventilation are passive cooling technologies that can reduce the cooling loads in buildings, but existing studies have not comprehensively explored the potential benefits of integrating these two technologies. This study combines an experiment in the summer and transition seasons with an annual simulation so as to evaluate the thermal performance, energy savings and thermal comfort improvement that could be obtained by coupling a cool roof with night ventilation. A holistic approach integrating sensitivity analysis and multi-objective optimization is developed to explore key design parameters (roof albedo, night ventilation air change rate, roof insulation level and internal thermal mass level) and optimal design options for the combined application of the cool roof and night ventilation. The proposed approach is validated and demonstrated through studies on a six-storey office building in Xiamen, a cooling-dominated city in southeast China. Simulations show that combining a cool roof with night ventilation can significantly decrease the annual cooling energy consumption by 27% compared to using a black roof without night ventilation and by 13% compared to using a cool roof without night ventilation. Roof albedo is the most influential parameter for both building energy performance and indoor thermal comfort. Optimal use of the cool roof and night ventilation can reduce the annual cooling energy use by 28% during occupied hours when air-conditioners are on and reduce the uncomfortable time slightly during occupied hours when air-conditioners are off
Active optical clock based on four-level quantum system
Active optical clock, a new conception of atomic clock, has been proposed
recently. In this report, we propose a scheme of active optical clock based on
four-level quantum system. The final accuracy and stability of two-level
quantum system are limited by second-order Doppler shift of thermal atomic
beam. To three-level quantum system, they are mainly limited by light shift of
pumping laser field. These limitations can be avoided effectively by applying
the scheme proposed here. Rubidium atom four-level quantum system, as a typical
example, is discussed in this paper. The population inversion between
and states can be built up at a time scale of s.
With the mechanism of active optical clock, in which the cavity mode linewidth
is much wider than that of the laser gain profile, it can output a laser with
quantum-limited linewidth narrower than 1 Hz in theory. An experimental
configuration is designed to realize this active optical clock.Comment: 5 page
Far-field scattering microscopy applied to analysis of slow light, power enhancement, and delay times in uniform Bragg waveguide gratings
A novel method is presented for determining the group index, intensity enhancement and delay times for waveguide gratings, based on (Rayleigh) scattering observations. This far-field scattering microscopy (FScM) method is compared with the phase shift method and a method that uses the transmission spectrum to quantify the slow wave properties. We find a minimum group velocity of 0.04c and a maximum intensity enhancement of ~14.5 for a 1000-period grating and a maximum group delay of ~80 ps for a 2000-period grating. Furthermore, we show that the FScM method can be used for both displaying the intensity distribution of the Bloch resonances and for investigating out of plane losses. Finally, an application is discussed for the slow-wave grating as index sensor able to detect a minimum cladding index change of , assuming a transmission detection limit of
Coherence freeze in an optical lattice investigated via pump-probe spectroscopy
Motivated by our observation of fast echo decay and a surprising coherence
freeze, we have developed a pump-probe spectroscopy technique for vibrational
states of ultracold Rb atoms in an optical lattice to gain information
about the memory dynamics of the system. We use pump-probe spectroscopy to
monitor the time-dependent changes of frequencies experienced by atoms and to
characterize the probability distribution of these frequency trajectories. We
show that the inferred distribution, unlike a naive microscopic model of the
lattice, correctly predicts the main features of the observed echo decay.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
A vertical monolithic combination of an InGaAsP/InP laser and a heterojunction bipolar transistor
A DH InGaAsP/InP mesa laser and a DH InGaAsP/InP mass-transport laser were successfully put together with an InGaAsP/InP heterojunction bipolar transistor in a vertical configuration. A laser threshold current as low as 17 mA and an output laser power of over 30 mW were achieved. Base injection current-controlled optical bistability and optical switching were demonstrated
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