38,298 research outputs found

    Off-axis retrieval of orbital angular momentum of light stored in cold atoms

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    We report on the storage of orbital angu- lar momentum (OAM) of light of a Laguerre-Gaussian mode in an ensemble of cold cesium atoms and its re- trieval along an axis different from the incident light beam. We employed a time-delayed four-wave mixing configuration to demonstrate that at small angle (2o), after storage, the retrieved beam carries the same OAM as the one encoded in the input beam. A calculation based on mode decomposition of the retrieved beam over the Laguerre-Gaussian basis is in agreement with the experimental observations done at small angle values. However, the calculation shows that the OAM retrieving would get lost at larger angles, reducing the fidelity of such storing-retrieving process. In addition, we have also observed that by applying an external magnetic field to the atomic ensemble the retrieved OAM presents Larmor oscillations, demonstrating the possibility of its manipulation and off-axis retrieval.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figure

    Does Good Mutation Help You Live Longer?

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    We study the dynamics of an age-structured population in which the life expectancy of an offspring may be mutated with respect to that of its parent. When advantageous mutation is favored, the average fitness of the population grows linearly with time tt, while in the opposite case the average fitness is constant. For no mutational bias, the average fitness grows as t^{2/3}. The average age of the population remains finite in all cases and paradoxically is a decreasing function of the overall population fitness.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, RevTeX revised version, to appear in Phys. Rev. Let

    On Universality in Human Correspondence Activity

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    Identifying and modeling patterns of human activity has important ramifications in applications ranging from predicting disease spread to optimizing resource allocation. Because of its relevance and availability, written correspondence provides a powerful proxy for studying human activity. One school of thought is that human correspondence is driven by responses to received correspondence, a view that requires distinct response mechanism to explain e-mail and letter correspondence observations. Here, we demonstrate that, like e-mail correspondence, the letter correspondence patterns of 16 writers, performers, politicians, and scientists are well-described by the circadian cycle, task repetition and changing communication needs. We confirm the universality of these mechanisms by properly rescaling letter and e-mail correspondence statistics to reveal their underlying similarity.Comment: 17 pages, 3 figures, 1 tabl

    Plasmon polaritons in photonic superlattices containing a left-handed material

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    We analyze one-dimensional photonic superlattices which alternate layers of air and a left-handed material. We assume Drude-type dispersive responses for the dielectric permittivity and magnetic permeability of the left-handed material. Maxwell's equations and the transfer-matrix technique are used to derive the dispersion relation for the propagation of obliquely incident optical fields. The photonic dispersion indicates that the growth-direction component of the electric (or magnetic) field leads to the propagation of electric (or magnetic) plasmon polaritons, for either TE or TM configurations. Furthermore, we show that if the plasma frequency is chosen within the photonic =0=0 zeroth-order bandgap, the coupling of light with plasmons weakens considerably. As light propagation is forbidden in that particular frequency region, the plasmon-polariton mode reduces to a pure plasmon mode.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure

    Divergência genética em população pré-selecionada de bacuri (Platonia insignis).

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    Os frutos da Amazônia têm despertado grande interesse nos últimos anos, tanto em nível nacional quanto internacional em decorrência dos seus sabores exóticos, por apresentarem altos teores de vitaminas e antioxidantes e pelo aproveitamento de suas polpas no agronegócio e na indústria farmacêutica (FERNANDES et al., 2003; FRAZON, 2004). As demandas do mercado para a polpa do bacuri são semelhantes às do açaí e do cupuaçu, em que se verifica um evidente conflito entre a oferta natural e a crescente pressão da demanda dessas fruteiras devido sua sazonalidade (MENEZES et al., 2012). Os programas de melhoramento precisam se adequar e ser direcionados para atender as especificidades das diversas regiões e assim suprir as demandas de mercado e as restrições de produção (BATISTA, 2013). Em muitas situações, principalmente naquelas voltadas para fins de melhoramento genético, têm sido comum o estudo da diversidade genética com a finalidade de identificar genitores adequados ao cruzamento tendo em vista a obtenção de híbridos de maiores efeitos heteróticos que proporcionem maior segregação em recombinações e possibilitem o aparecimento de transgressivos (CRUZ et al., 2011). O bacuri apresenta flores perfeitas de tamanho grande, assim, a emasculação e os cruzamentos controlados se darão de maneira relativamente simples entre os genitores geneticamente divergentes, para a obtenção dos híbridos (progênies) do segundo ciclo de seleção recorrente. O objetivo deste trabalho foi determinar os grupos geneticamente divergentes entre genótipos de bacuri pré-selecionados para os atributos agrotecnológicos

    Experimentally Witnessing the Quantumness of Correlations

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    The quantification of quantum correlations (other than entanglement) usually entails laboured numerical optimization procedures also demanding quantum state tomographic methods. Thus it is interesting to have a laboratory friendly witness for the nature of correlations. In this Letter we report a direct experimental implementation of such a witness in a room temperature nuclear magnetic resonance system. In our experiment the nature of correlations is revealed by performing only few local magnetization measurements. We also compare the witness results with those for the symmetric quantum discord and we obtained a fairly good agreement

    Crossover in the scaling of island size and capture zone distributions

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    Simulations of irreversible growth of extended (fractal and square) islands with critical island sizes i=1 and 2 are performed in broad ranges of coverage \theta and diffusion-to-deposition ratios R in order to investigate scaling of island size and capture zone area distributions (ISD, CZD). Large \theta and small R lead to a crossover from the CZD predicted by the theory of Pimpinelli and Einstein (PE), with Gaussian right tail, to CZD with simple exponential decays. The corresponding ISD also cross over from Gaussian or faster decays to simple exponential ones. For fractal islands, these features are explained by changes in the island growth kinetics, from a competition for capture of diffusing adatoms (PE scaling) to aggregation of adatoms with effectively irrelevant diffusion, which is characteristic of random sequential adsorption (RSA) without surface diffusion. This interpretation is confirmed by studying the crossover with similar CZ areas (of order 100 sites) in a model with freezing of diffusing adatoms that corresponds to i=0. For square islands, deviations from PE predictions appear for coverages near \theta=0.2 and are mainly related to island coalescence. Our results show that the range of applicability of the PE theory is narrow, thus observing the predicted Gaussian tail of CZD may be difficult in real systems.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figure
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