820 research outputs found
Cavity polariton optomechanics: Polariton path to fully resonant dispersive coupling in optomechanical resonators
Resonant photoelastic coupling in semiconductor nanostructures opens new
perspectives for strongly enhanced light-sound interaction in optomechanical
resonators. One potential problem, however, is the reduction of the cavity
Q-factor induced by dissipation when the resonance is approached. We show in
this letter that cavity-polariton mediation in the light-matter process
overcomes this limitation allowing for a strongly enhanced photon-phonon
coupling without significant lifetime reduction in the strongly-coupled regime.
Huge optomechanical coupling factors in the PetaHz/nm range are envisaged,
three orders of magnitude larger than the backaction produced by the mechanical
displacement of the cavity mirrors.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Comment on ``Deterministic equations of motion and phase ordering dynamics''
Zheng [Phys. Rev. E {\bf 61}, 153 (2000), cond-mat/9909324] claims that phase
ordering dynamics in the microcanonical model displays unusual scaling
laws. We show here, performing more careful numerical investigations, that
Zheng only observed transient dynamics mostly due to the corrections to scaling
introduced by lattice effects, and that Ising-like (model A) phase ordering
actually takes place at late times. Moreover, we argue that energy conservation
manifests itself in different corrections to scaling.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Matching LTB and FRW spacetimes through a null hypersurface
Matching of a LTB metric representing dust matter to a background FRW
universe across a null hypersurface is studied. In general, an unrestricted
matching is possible only if the background FRW is flat or open. There is in
general no gravitational impulsive wave present on the null hypersurface which
is shear-free and expanding. Special cases of the vanishing pressure or energy
density on the hypersurface is discussed. In the case of vanishing energy
momentum tensor of the null hypersurface, i.e. in the case of a null boundary,
it turns out that all possible definitions of the Hubble parameter on the null
hypersurface, being those of LTB or that of FRW, are equivalent, and that a
flat FRW can only be joined smoothly to a flat LTB.Comment: 9 page
Symmetry analysis and exact solutions of modified Brans-Dicke cosmological equations
We perform a symmetry analysis of modified Brans-Dicke cosmological equations
and present exact solutions. We discuss how the solutions may help to build
models of cosmology where, for the early universe, the expansion is linear and
the equation of state just changes the expansion velocity but not the
linearity. For the late universe the expansion is exponential and the effect of
the equation of state on the rate of expansion is just to change the constant
Hubble parameter.Comment: LaTeX2e source file, 14 pages, 7 reference
Sub-Terahertz Monochromatic Transduction with Semiconductor Acoustic Nanodevices
We demonstrate semiconductor superlattices or nanocavities as narrow band
acoustic transducers in the sub-terahertz range. Using picosecond ultrasonics
experiments in the transmission geometry with pump and probe incident on
opposite sides of the thick substrate, phonon generation and detection
processes are fully decoupled. Generating with the semiconductor device and
probing on the metal, we show that both superlattices and nanocavities generate
spectrally narrow wavepackets of coherent phonons with frequencies in the
vicinity of the zone center and time durations in the nanosecond range,
qualitatively different from picosecond broadband pulses usually involved in
picosecond acoustics with metal generators. Generating in the metal and probing
on the nanoacoustic device, we furthermore evidence that both nanostructured
semiconductor devices may be used as very sensitive and spectrally selective
detectors
Effect of picosecond strain pulses on thin layers of the ferromagnetic semiconductor (Ga,Mn)(As,P)
The effect of picosecond acoustic strain pulses (ps-ASP) on a thin layer of
(Ga,Mn)As co-doped with phosphorus was probed using magneto-optical Kerr effect
(MOKE). A transient MOKE signal followed by low amplitude oscillations was
evidenced, with a strong dependence on applied magnetic field, temperature and
ps-ASP amplitude. Careful interferometric measurement of the layer's thickness
variation induced by the ps-ASP allowed us to model very accurately the
resulting signal, and interpret it as the strain modulated reflectivity
(differing for probe polarizations), independently from dynamic
magnetization effects.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure
Field-Driven Domain-Wall Dynamics in GaMnAs Films with Perpendicular Anisotropy
We combine magneto-optical imaging and a magnetic field pulse technique to
study domain wall dynamics in a ferromagnetic (Ga,Mn)As layer with
perpendicular easy axis. Contrary to ultrathin metallic layers, the depinning
field is found to be smaller than the Walker field, thereby allowing for the
observation of the steady and precessional flow regimes. The domain wall width
and damping parameters are determined self-consistently. The damping, 30 times
larger than the one deduced from ferromagnetic resonance, is shown to
essentially originate from the non-conservation of the magnetization modulus.
An unpredicted damping resonance and a dissipation regime associated with the
existence of horizontal Bloch lines are also revealed
Microscopic nanomechanical dissipation in gallium arsenide resonators
We report on a systematic study of nanomechanical dissipation in
high-frequency (approximatively 300 MHz) gallium arsenide optomechanical disk
resonators, in conditions where clamping and fluidic losses are negligible.
Phonon-phonon interactions are shown to contribute with a loss background
fading away at cryogenic temperatures (3 K). Atomic layer deposition of alumina
at the surface modifies the quality factor of resonators, pointing towards the
importance of surface dissipation. The temperature evolution is accurately
fitted by two-level systems models, showing that nanomechanical dissipation in
gallium arsenide resonators directly connects to their microscopic properties.
Two-level systems, notably at surfaces, appear to rule the damping and
fluctuations of such high-quality crystalline nanomechanical devices, at all
temperatures from 3 to 300K
The Lemaitre-Schwarzschild Problem Revisited
The Lemaitre and Schwarzschild analytical solutions for a relativistic
spherical body of constant density are linked together through the use of the
Weyl quadratic invariant. The critical radius for gravitational collapse of an
incompressible fluid is shown to vary continuously from 9/8 of the
Schwarzschild radius to the Schwarzschild radius itself while the internal
pressures become locally anisotropic.Comment: Final version as accepted by GR&G (to appear in vol. 34, september
2002
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