10,447 research outputs found

    Dielectric geometric phase optical elements from femtosecond direct laser writing

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    We propose to use femtosecond direct laser writing technique to realize dielectric optical elements from photo-resist materials for the generation of structured light from purely geometrical phase transformations. This is illustrated by the fabrication and characterization of spin-to-orbital optical angular momentum couplers generating optical vortices of topological charge from 1 to 20. In addition, the technique is scalable and allows obtaining microscopic to macroscopic flat optics. These results thus demonstrate that direct 3D photopolymerization technology qualifies for the realization of spin-controlled geometric phase optical elements.Comment: 6 figure

    X-ray and UV investigation into the magnetic connectivity of a solar flare

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    We investigate the X-ray and UV emission detected by RHESSI and TRACE in the context of a solar flare on the 16th November 2002 with the goal of better understanding the evolution of the flare. We analysed the characteristics of the X-ray emission in the 12-25 and 25-50 keV energy range while we looked at the UV emission at 1600 {\AA}. The flare appears to have two distinct phases of emission separated by a 25-second time delay, with the first phase being energetically more important. We found good temporal and spatial agreement between the 25-50 keV X-rays and the most intense areas of the 1600 {\AA} UV emission. We also observed an extended 100-arcsecond < 25 keV source that appears coronal in nature and connects two separated UV ribbons later in the flare. Using the observational properties in X-ray and UV wavelengths, we propose two explanations for the flare evolution in relation to the spine/fan magnetic field topology and the accelerated electrons. We find that a combination of quasi separatrix layer reconnection and null-point reconnection is required to account for the observed properties of the X-ray and UV emission.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figures, published in Astronomy and Astrophysic

    Homogenization of the linear Boltzmann equation in a domain with a periodic distribution of holes

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    Consider a linear Boltzmann equation posed on the Euclidian plane with a periodic system of circular holes and for particles moving at speed 1. Assuming that the holes are absorbing -- i.e. that particles falling in a hole remain trapped there forever, we discuss the homogenization limit of that equation in the case where the reciprocal number of holes per unit surface and the length of the circumference of each hole are asymptotically equivalent small quantities. We show that the mass loss rate due to particles falling into the holes is governed by a renewal equation that involves the distribution of free-path lengths for the periodic Lorentz gas. In particular, it is proved that the total mass of the particle system at time t decays exponentially fast as t tends to infinity. This is at variance with the collisionless case discussed in [Caglioti, E., Golse, F., Commun. Math. Phys. 236 (2003), pp. 199--221], where the total mass decays as Const./t as the time variable t tends to infinity.Comment: 29 pages, 1 figure, submitted; figure 1 corrected in new versio

    Long-time properties of MHD turbulence and the role of symmetries

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    We investigate long-time properties of three-dimensional MHD turbulence in the absence of forcing and examine in particular the role played by the quadratic invariants of the system and by the symmetries of the initial configurations. We observe that, when sufficient accuracy is used, initial conditions with a high degree of symmetries, as in the absence of helicity, do not travel through parameter space over time whereas by perturbing these solutions either explicitly or implicitly using for example single precision for long times, the flows depart from their original behavior and can become either strongly helical, or have a strong alignment between the velocity and the magnetic field. When the symmetries are broken, the flows evolve towards different end states, as predicted by statistical arguments for non-dissipative systems with the addition of an energy minimization principle, as already analyzed in \cite{stribling_90} for random initial conditions using a moderate number of Fourier modes. Furthermore, the alignment properties of these flows, between velocity, vorticity, magnetic potential, induction and current, correspond to the dominance of two main regimes, one helically dominated and one in quasi-equipartition of kinetic and magnetic energy. We also contrast the scaling of the ratio of magnetic energy to kinetic energy as a function of wavenumber to the ratio of eddy turn-over time to Alfv\'en time as a function of wavenumber. We find that the former ratio is constant with an approximate equipartition for scales smaller than the largest scale of the flow whereas the ratio of time scales increases with increasing wavenumber.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figure
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