1,188 research outputs found

    Coarse wavelength division multiplexer on silicon-on-insulator for 100 GbE

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    A four-channel cascaded MZl based de-multiplexer at O-band with coarse channel spacing of 20 nm and band flatness of 13 nm is demonstrated on silicon-on-insulator. The device shows a mean crosstalk and insertion loss below -16 dB and 2.5 dB

    Road blocks on paleogenomes - polymerase extension profiling reveals the frequency of blocking lesions in ancient DNA

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    Although the last few years have seen great progress in DNA sequence retrieval from fossil specimens, some of the characteristics of ancient DNA remain poorly understood. This is particularly true for blocking lesions, i.e. chemical alterations that cannot be bypassed by DNA polymerases and thus prevent amplification and subsequent sequencing of affected molecules. Some studies have concluded that the vast majority of ancient DNA molecules carry blocking lesions, suggesting that the removal, repair or bypass of blocking lesions might dramatically increase both the time depth and geographical range of specimens available for ancient DNA analysis. However, previous studies used very indirect detection methods that did not provide conclusive estimates on the frequency of blocking lesions in endogenous ancient DNA. We developed a new method, polymerase extension profiling (PEP), that directly reveals occurrences of polymerase stalling on DNA templates. By sequencing thousands of single primer extension products using PEP methodology, we have for the first time directly identified blocking lesions in ancient DNA on a single molecule level. Although we found clear evidence for blocking lesions in three out of four ancient samples, no more than 40% of the molecules were affected in any of the samples, indicating that such modifications are far less frequent in ancient DNA than previously thought

    Between the ground- and M-state of bacteriorhodopsin the retinal transition dipole moment tilts out of the plane of the membrane by only 3°

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    AbstractThe orientation of the transition dipole moments in the ground state and the M-intermediate of bacteriorhodopsin were determined by time-resolved and steady-state polarized absorption spectroscopy on samples of oriented immobilized purple membranes. The angle between the transition dipole moment and the membrane normal decreases from 66.8±0.5° in the all-trans ground state to 64.1±0.8° in the 13-cis M-state. The light-induced isomerization of the chromophore is thus accompanied by an orientational change of only about 3° out of the plane of the membrane. The absorption anisotropy at 410 nm remains constant over more than 4 decades of time covering both the rise and decay of M. Conformational changes accompanying a sequential M1→M2 transition thus do not affect the chromophore orientation

    Low-voltage Ge avalanche photodetector for highly sensitive 10Gb/s Si photonic receivers

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    We demonstrate low-voltage germanium waveguide avalanche photodetectors (APD) with gain-bandwidth product of 88GHz. A 7.1dB sensitivity improvement is demonstrated for an APD wire-bonded to a 10Gb/s CMOS transimpedance amplifier, at -6.2V APD bias

    8x14Gb/s ring WDM modulator array with integrated tungsten heaters and Ge monitor photodetectors

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    An 8x14Gb/s wavelength-division multiplexed Si ring modulator array is presented with uniform channel performance. Tungsten heaters and Ge monitor photodetectors at the ring modulator drop ports are co-integrated to track and control the modulation quality

    Low-voltage waveguide Ge APD based high sensitivity 10 Gb/s Si photonic receiver

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    We demonstrate low-voltage Ge waveguide avalanche photodetectors (APDs) with gain-bandwidth product over 100GHz. A 5.8dB avalanche sensitivity improvement (1x10(-12) bit error ratio at 10Gb/s) is obtained for the wire-bonded optical receiver at -5.9V APD bias

    Single-dot Spectroscopy of GaAs Quantum Dots Fabricated by Filling of Self-assembled Nanoholes

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    We study the optical emission of single GaAs quantum dots (QDs). The QDs are fabricated by filling of nanoholes in AlGaAs and AlAs which are generated in a self-assembled fashion by local droplet etching with Al droplets. Using suitable process parameters, we create either uniform QDs in partially filled deep holes or QDs with very broad size distribution in completely filled shallow holes. Micro photoluminescence measurements of single QDs of both types establish sharp excitonic peaks. We measure a fine-structure splitting in the range of 22–40μeV and no dependence on QD size. Furthermore, we find a decrease in exciton–biexciton splitting with increasing QD size
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