198 research outputs found
Controlling the phase of a light beam with a single molecule
We employ heterodyne interferometry to investigate the effect of a single
organic molecule on the phase of a propagating laser beam. We report on the
first phase-contrast images of individual molecules and demonstrate a
single-molecule electro-optical phase switch by applying a voltage to the
microelectrodes embedded in the sample. Our results may find applications in
single-molecule holography, fast optical coherent signal processing, and
single-emitter quantum operations
Dynamical heat channels
We consider heat conduction in a 1D dynamical channel. The channel consists
of a group of noninteracting particles, which move between two heat baths
according to some dynamical process. We show that the essential thermodynamic
properties of the heat channel can be evaluated from the diffusion properties
of the underlying particles. Emphasis is put on the conduction under anomalous
diffusion conditions. \\{\bf PACS number}: 05.40.+j, 05.45.ac, 05.60.cdComment: 4 figure
Survival Probability in a Random Velocity Field
The time dependence of the survival probability, S(t), is determined for
diffusing particles in two dimensions which are also driven by a random
unidirectional zero-mean velocity field, v_x(y). For a semi-infinite system
with unbounded y and x>0, and with particle absorption at x=0, a qualitative
argument is presented which indicates that S(t)~t^{-1/4}. This prediction is
supported by numerical simulations. A heuristic argument is also given which
suggests that the longitudinal probability distribution of the surviving
particles has the scaling form P(x,t)~ t^{-1}u^{1/3}g(u). Here the scaling
variable u is proportional to x/t^{3/4}, so that the overall time dependence of
P(x,t) is proportional to t^{-5/4}, and the scaling function g(u) has the
limiting dependences g(u) approaching a constant as u--->0 and
g(u)~exp(-u^{4/3}) as u--->infinity. This argument also suggests an effective
continuum equation of motion for the infinite system which reproduces the
correct asymptotic longitudinal probability distribution.Comment: 6 pages, RevTeX, 5 figures includes, to be submitted to Phys. Rev.
Strong extinction of a laser beam by a single molecule
We present an experiment where a single molecule strongly affects the
amplitude and phase of a laser field emerging from a subwavelength aperture. We
achieve a visibility of -6% in direct and +10% in cross-polarized detection
schemes. Our analysis shows that a close to full extinction should be possible
using near-field excitation.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, submitted to PR
Anomalous diffusion and dynamical localization in a parabolic map
We study numerically classical and quantum dynamics of a piecewise parabolic
area preserving map on a cylinder which emerges from the bounce map of
elongated triangular billiards. The classical map exhibits anomalous diffusion.
Quantization of the same map results in a system with dynamical localization
and pure point spectrum.Comment: 4 pages in RevTeX (4 ps-figures included
Quantum Interference of Tunably Indistinguishable Photons from Remote Organic Molecules
We demonstrate two-photon interference using two remote single molecules as
bright solid-state sources of indistinguishable photons. By varying the
transition frequency and spectral width of one molecule, we tune and explore
the effect of photon distinguishability. We discuss future improvements on the
brightness of single-photon beams, their integration by large numbers on chips,
and the extension of our experimental scheme to coupling and entanglement of
distant molecules
Photon Channelling in Foams
Experiments by Gittings, Bandyopadhyay, and Durian [Europhys. Lett.\
\textbf{65}, 414 (2004)] demonstrate that light possesses a higher probability
to propagate in the liquid phase of a foam due to total reflection. The authors
term this observation photon channelling which we investigate in this article
theoretically. We first derive a central relation in the work of Gitting {\em
et al.} without any free parameters. It links the photon's path-length fraction
in the liquid phase to the liquid fraction . We then construct
two-dimensional Voronoi foams, replace the cell edges by channels to represent
the liquid films and simulate photon paths according to the laws of ray optics
using transmission and reflection coefficients from Fresnel's formulas. In an
exact honeycomb foam, the photons show superdiffusive behavior. It becomes
diffusive as soon as disorder is introduced into the foams. The dependence of
the diffusion constant on channel width and refractive index is explained by a
one-dimensional random-walk model. It contains a photon channelling state that
is crucial for the understanding of the numerical results. At the end, we
shortly comment on the observation that photon channelling only occurs in a
finite range of .Comment: 9 pages, minor change
From deterministic dynamics to kinetic phenomena
We investigate a one-dimenisonal Hamiltonian system that describes a system
of particles interacting through short-range repulsive potentials. Depending on
the particle mean energy, , the system demonstrates a spectrum of
kinetic regimes, characterized by their transport properties ranging from
ballistic motion to localized oscillations through anomalous diffusion regimes.
We etsablish relationships between the observed kinetic regimes and the
"thermodynamic" states of the system. The nature of heat conduction in the
proposed model is discussed.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
- …