476,133 research outputs found
Sensing Coherent Phonons with Two-photon Interference
Detecting coherent phonons pose different challenges compared to coherent
photons due to the much stronger interaction between phonons and matter. This
is especially true for high frequency heat carrying phonons, which are
intrinsic lattice vibrations experiencing many decoherence events with the
environment, and are thus generally assumed to be incoherent. Two photon
interference techniques, especially coherent population trapping (CPT) and
electromagnetically induced transparency (EIT), have led to extremely sensitive
detection, spectroscopy and metrology. Here, we propose the use of two photon
interference in a three level system to sense coherent phonons. Unlike prior
works which have treated phonon coupling as damping, we account for coherent
phonon coupling using a full quantum-mechanical treatment. We observe strong
asymmetry in absorption spectrum in CPT and negative dispersion in EIT
susceptibility in the presence of coherent phonon coupling which cannot be
accounted for if only pure phonon damping is considered. Our proposal has
application in sensing heat carrying coherent phonons effects and understanding
coherent bosonic multi-pathway interference effects in three coupled oscillator
systems
Coherent Exciton Lasing in ZnSe/ZnCdSe Quantum Wells?
A new mechanism for exciton lasing in ZnSe/ZnCdSe quantum wells is proposed.
Lasing, occurring below the lowest exciton line, may be associated with a
BCS-like condensed (coherent) exciton state. This state is most stable at low
temperatures for densities in the transition region separating the exciton Bose
gas and the coherent exciton state. Calculations show the gain region to lie
below the exciton line and to be separated from the absorption regime by a
transparency region of width, for example, about 80 meV for a 90 Angstrom
ZnSe/Zn_(0.75)Cd_(0.25)Se quantum well. Experimental observation of the
transparency region using differential spectroscopy would confirm this picture.Comment: 9 pages + 3 figs contained in 4 postscript files to appear Appl.
  Phys. Lett. March 13, 199
Characterizing Service Level Objectives for Cloud Services: Motivation of Short-Term Cache Allocation Performance Modeling
Service level objectives (SLOs) stipulate performance goals for cloud applications, microservices, and infrastructure. SLOs are widely used, in part, because system managers can tailor goals to their products, companies, and workloads. Systems research intended to support strong SLOs should target realistic performance goals used by system managers in the field. Evaluations conducted with uncommon SLO goals may not translate to real systems. Some textbooks discuss the structure of SLOs but (1) they only sketch SLO goals and (2) they use outdated examples. We mined real SLOs published on the web, extracted their goals and characterized them. Many web documents discuss SLOs loosely but few provide details and reflect real settings. Systematic literature review (SLR) prunes results and reduces bias by (1) modeling expected SLO structure and (2) detecting and removing outliers. We collected 75 SLOs where response time, query percentile and reporting period were specified. We used these SLOs to confirm and refute common perceptions. For example, we found few SLOs with response time guarantees below 10 ms for 90% or more queries. This reality bolsters perceptions that single digit SLOs face fundamental research challenges.This work was funded by NSF Grants 1749501 and 1350941.No embargoAcademic Major: Computer Science and EngineeringAcademic Major: Financ
A NEW FUNCTION AND ITS MEAN VALUE
The main purpose of this paper is using the elementary method to study the mean
value properties of a new function for n, and give a sharp asymptotic formula for it
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