1,764 research outputs found

    Cooperative effects in one-dimensional random atomic gases: Absence of single atom limit

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    We study superradiance in a one-dimensional geometry, where N>>1 atoms are randomly distributed along a line. We present an analytic calculation of the photon escape rates based on the diagonalization of the N x N coupling matrix Uij = cos xij, where xij is the dimensionless random distance between any two atoms. We show that unlike a three-dimensional geometry, for a one- dimensional atomic gas the single-atom limit is never reached and the photon is always localized within the atomic ensemble. This localization originates from long-range cooperative effects and not from disorder as expected on the basis of the theory of Anderson localization.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure

    Cooperative effects and disorder: A scaling analysis of the spectrum of the effective atomic Hamiltonian

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    We study numerically the spectrum of the non-Hermitian effective Hamiltonian that describes the dipolar interaction of a gas of N≫1N\gg 1 atoms with the radiation field. We analyze the interplay between cooperative effects and disorder for both scalar and vectorial radiation fields. We show that for dense gases, the resonance width distribution follows, both in the scalar and vectorial cases, a power law P(Γ)∼Γ−4/3P(\Gamma) \sim \Gamma^{-4/3} that originates from cooperative effects between more than two atoms. This power law is different from the P(Γ)∼Γ−1 P(\Gamma) \sim \Gamma^{-1} behavior, which has been considered as a signature of Anderson localization of light in random systems. We show that in dilute clouds, the center of the energy distribution is described by Wigner's semicircle law in the scalar and vectorial cases. For dense gases, this law is replaced in the vectorial case by the Laplace distribution. Finally, we show that in the scalar case the degree of resonance overlap increases as a power law of the system size for dilute gases, but decays exponentially with the system size for dense clouds.Comment: 11 pages, 12 figure

    An assessment of warm fog: Nucleation, control, and recommended research

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    A state-of-the-art survey is given of warm fog research which has been performed up to, and including, 1974. Topics covered are nucleation, growth, coalescence, fog structures and visibility, effects of surface films, drop size spectrum, optical properties, instrumentation, liquid water content, condensation nuclei. Included is a summary of all reported fog modification experiments. Additional data is provided on air flow, turbulence, a summary of recommendations on instruments to be developed for determining turbulence, air flow, etc., as well as recommendations of various fog research tasks which should be performed for a better understanding of fog microphysics

    Gero A. Nootz

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    Gero A. Nootz

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