368 research outputs found

    Broadband integrated beam splitter using spatial adiabatic passage

    Full text link
    Light routing and manipulation are important aspects of integrated optics. They essentially rely on beam splitters which are at the heart of interferometric setups and active routing. The most common implementations of beam splitters suffer either from strong dispersive response (directional couplers) or tight fabrication tolerances (multimode interference couplers). In this paper we fabricate a robust and simple broadband integrated beam splitter based on lithium niobate with a splitting ratio achromatic over more than 130 nm. Our architecture is based on spatial adiabatic passage, a technique originally used to transfer entirely an optical beam from a waveguide to another one that has been shown to be remarkably robust against fabrication imperfections and wavelength dispersion. Our device shows a splitting ratio of 0.52±\pm 0.03 and 0.48±\pm 0.03 from 1500\,nm up to 1630\,nm. Furthermore, we show that suitable design enables the splitting in output beams with relative phase 0 or π\pi. Thanks to their independence to material dispersion, these devices represent simple, elementary components to create achromatic and versatile photonic circuits

    Morphological evolution of the Kwinte Bank central depression before and after the cessation of aggregate extraction

    Get PDF
    Analyses of the records of ships registers and Electronic Monitoring Systems, of the trailer suction hopper dredgers, operating on the Belgian Continental Shelf, reveal that since the beginning of extraction in 1976, 75% of the total extracted volume originates from only one sandbank, the Kwinte Bank. At present, two morphologically-distinguished depressions are observed along the two most dredged areas of this sandbank: one in the central; and one in the northern part of the bank. In order to limit the impact of sand extraction on the bathymetry, the central depression of the Kwinte Bank was closed for exploitation, in February 2003. An understanding of the morphological evolution of this central depression is based upon data obtained: (a) from November 1999, until the closure for extraction in February 2003; and (b) on the subsequent post-dredging evolution, until June 2005. During this 5-year period, a total of 17 surveys were carried out with a multibeam echosounder over the area of the central depression (KBMA) and over a reference zone on an adjacent non-exploited sandbank. The resulting time-series of bathymetrical digital terrain models, together with backscatter strength maps, permit a detailed comparison of the bathy-morphological and sedimentary evolution of both of the monitored areas. Since the commencement of multibeam monitoring in 1999, an overall deepening (by 0.5m) of the entire KBMA monitoring zone is observed, until the cessation of dredging, in February 2003. Subsequently, the deepening slowed down and the variation in sediment volumes became similar to that of the adjacent non-exploited sandbank. From this, marine aggregate extraction appears to have only a local impact

    Accurate Anisotropic Fast Marching for Diffusion-Based Geodesic Tractography

    Get PDF
    Using geodesics for inferring white matter fibre tracts from diffusion-weighted MR data is an attractive method for at least two reasons: (i) the method optimises a global criterion, and hence is less sensitive to local perturbations such as noise or partial volume effects, and (ii) the method is fast, allowing to infer on a large number of connexions in a reasonable computational time. Here, we propose an improved fast marching algorithm to infer on geodesic paths. Specifically, this procedure is designed to achieve accurate front propagation in an anisotropic elliptic medium, such as DTI data. We evaluate the numerical performance of this approach on simulated datasets, as well as its robustness to local perturbation induced by fiber crossing. On real data, we demonstrate the feasibility of extracting geodesics to connect an extended set of brain regions

    A review of fMRI simulation studies

    Get PDF
    Simulation studies that validate statistical techniques for fMRI data are challenging due to the complexity of the data. Therefore, it is not surprising that no common data generating process is available (i.e. several models can be found to model BOLD activation and noise). Based on a literature search, a database of simulation studies was compiled. The information in this database was analysed and critically evaluated focusing on the parameters in the simulation design, the adopted model to generate fMRI data, and on how the simulation studies are reported. Our literature analysis demonstrates that many fMRI simulation studies do not report a thorough experimental design and almost consistently ignore crucial knowledge on how fMRI data are acquired. Advice is provided on how the quality of fMRI simulation studies can be improved

    Charge-Density-Waves Tuned by Crystal Symmetry

    Full text link
    The electronic orders appearing in condensed matter systems are originating from the precise arrangement of atoms constituting the crystal as well as their nature. This teneous relationship can lead to highly different phases in condensed matter, and drive electronic phase transitions. Here, we show that a very slight deformation of the crystal structure of TbTe3_3 can have a dramatic influence on the electronic order that is stabilized. In particular, we show that the Charge Density Wave (CDW) developping along the c\vec{c} axis in the pristine state, switches to an orientation along a\vec{a} when the naturally orthorhombic system is turned into a tetragonal system. This is achieved by performing true biaxial mechanical deformation of a TbTe3_3 sample from 250K to 375K, and by measuring both structural and electronic parameters with x-ray diffraction and transport measurements. We show that this switching transition is driven by the tetragonality parameter a/ca/c, and that the transition occurs for a=ca=c, with a coexistence region for 0.9985<a/c<1.0020.9985< a/c < 1.002. The CDW transition temperature TcT_c is found to have a linear dependence with a/ca/c, with no saturation in the deformed states investigated here, while the gap saturates out of the coexistence region. The linear dependence of TcT_c is accounted for within a tight-binding model. Our results question the relationship between the gap and TcT_c in RTe3_3 systems. More generally, our method of applying true biaxial deformation at cryogenic temperatures can be applied to many systems displaying electronic phase transitions, and opens a new route towards the study of coexisting or competing electronic orders in condensed matter
    corecore