3,902 research outputs found
High-order localized spoof surface plasmon resonances and experimental verifications
We theoretically demonstrated and experimentally verified high-order radial
spoof localized surface plasmon resonances supported by textured metal
particles. Through an effective medium theory and exact numerical simulations,
we show the emergence of these geometrically-originated electromagnetic modes
at microwave frequencies. The occurrence of high-order radial spoof plasmon
resonances is experimentally verified in ultrathin disks. Their spectral and
near-field properties are characterized experimentally, showing an excellent
agreement with theoretical predictions. Our findings shed light into the nature
of spoof localized surface plasmons, and open the way to the design of
broadband plasmonic devices able to operate at very different frequency
regimes.Comment: 29 pages, 10 figure
Modeling the adiabatic creation of ultracold, polar molecules
In this work we model and realize stimulated Raman adiabatic passage (STIRAP)
in the diatomic molecule from weakly bound Feshbach
molecules to the rovibronic ground state via the
excited state in the electronic
potential. We demonstrate how to set up a quantitative model for polar molecule
production by taking into account the rich internal structure of the molecules
and the coupling laser phase noise. We find excellent agreement between the
model predictions and the experiment, demonstrating the applicability of the
model in the search of an ideal STIRAP transfer path. In total we produce 5000
fermionic groundstate molecules. The typical phase-space density of the sample
is 0.03 and induced dipole moments of up to 0.54 Debye could be observed.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures Version 2: Fixed a few typos, elaborated more on
the differences between different choices of intermediate state, clarified
H\"onl-London factor, added a intuitive explanation of the benefits of
detuned STIRAP, elaborated on realized dipole moments in diatomics, compared
phase-space density reducing processes in the whole molecule creation
process, added two more reference
Cohort records study of 19,655 women who received postabortion care in a tertiary hospital 2010–2013 in China : what trends can be observed?
The retrospective cohort epidemiological study was to investigate the characteristics of women who underwent induced abortion. Data were retrospectively collected from women who underwent induced abortions () at the Xiamen Maternity and Child Health Care Hospital (2010–2013). The characteristics of women who underwent induced abortions included mean age, unmarried status, no previous deliveries, first pregnancy, ≥2 abortions including the current one, and a history of caesarian section. From 2010 to 2013, mean age increased and declines were observed in the ratio of induced abortions to live births, the proportion of induced abortions among women of 15–24 years, those who were unmarried, had their first pregnancy, or had no history of delivery. However, the rates of induced abortions increased among women who were lactating, had a history of caesarian section, or had an interpregnancy interval of <6 months. This snapshot of induced abortions in China might suggest that the numbers are increasing but the ratio to live births has fallen. Methods should be improved to prevent unwanted pregnancies and reduce the number of induced abortions in China. It must be emphasized that differences in mentality and culture between countries might limit the representativeness of these results
A GPU-accelerated package for simulation of flow in nanoporous source rocks with many-body dissipative particle dynamics
Mesoscopic simulations of hydrocarbon flow in source shales are challenging,
in part due to the heterogeneous shale pores with sizes ranging from a few
nanometers to a few micrometers. Additionally, the sub-continuum fluid-fluid
and fluid-solid interactions in nano- to micro-scale shale pores, which are
physically and chemically sophisticated, must be captured. To address those
challenges, we present a GPU-accelerated package for simulation of flow in
nano- to micro-pore networks with a many-body dissipative particle dynamics
(mDPD) mesoscale model. Based on a fully distributed parallel paradigm, the
code offloads all intensive workloads on GPUs. Other advancements, such as
smart particle packing and no-slip boundary condition in complex pore
geometries, are also implemented for the construction and the simulation of the
realistic shale pores from 3D nanometer-resolution stack images. Our code is
validated for accuracy and compared against the CPU counterpart for speedup. In
our benchmark tests, the code delivers nearly perfect strong scaling and weak
scaling (with up to 512 million particles) on up to 512 K20X GPUs on Oak Ridge
National Laboratory's (ORNL) Titan supercomputer. Moreover, a single-GPU
benchmark on ORNL's SummitDev and IBM's AC922 suggests that the host-to-device
NVLink can boost performance over PCIe by a remarkable 40\%. Lastly, we
demonstrate, through a flow simulation in realistic shale pores, that the CPU
counterpart requires 840 Power9 cores to rival the performance delivered by our
package with four V100 GPUs on ORNL's Summit architecture. This simulation
package enables quick-turnaround and high-throughput mesoscopic numerical
simulations for investigating complex flow phenomena in nano- to micro-porous
rocks with realistic pore geometries
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