119 research outputs found
La luz portadora de información: las fibras ópticas
La electricidad y la electrónica han sido, habitualmente, los elementos básicos para el desarrollo de las comunicaciones a través de medios guiados. Desde el viejo telégrafo hasta los modernos sistemas de transmisión de televisión por cable, todas las técnicas empleadas han tenido en común el envío de una señal eléctrica a través de un elemento conductor. De igual manera a como llega la electricidad a los hogares, por medio de un cable metálico, el teléfono, el télex, el facsímil... todos ellos emplean una técnica en cierta manera análoga: una corriente eléctrica, llevando con ella la información deseada, accede a un equipo capaz de convertirla en señal reconocible por el usuario. En ocasiones, cuando la frecuencia de la señal transmitida es lo suficientemente alta, puede no ser una corriente eléctrica análoga a la empleada, por ejemplo, para alimentar los electrodomésticos convencionales. En esas circunstancias la información es transportada por un campo electromagnético y el medio por el que se desplaza puede ser una guía metálica hueca. Pero todos los elementos que la rodean siguen estando basados en conceptos derivados del manejo de corrientes eléctricas y en su procesado mediante técnicas, en general, electrónicas
The physics of angular momentum radio
Wireless communications, radio astronomy and other radio science applications
are predominantly implemented with techniques built on top of the
electromagnetic linear momentum (Poynting vector) physical layer. As a
supplement and/or alternative to this conventional approach, techniques rooted
in the electromagnetic angular momentum physical layer have been advocated, and
promising results from proof-of-concept radio communication experiments using
angular momentum were recently published. This sparingly exploited physical
observable describes the rotational (spinning and orbiting) physical properties
of the electromagnetic fields and the rotational dynamics of the pertinent
charge and current densities. In order to facilitate the exploitation of
angular momentum techniques in real-world implementations, we present a
systematic, comprehensive theoretical review of the fundamental physical
properties of electromagnetic angular momentum observable. Starting from an
overview that puts it into its physical context among the other Poincar\'e
invariants of the electromagnetic field, we describe the multi-mode quantized
character and other physical properties that sets electromagnetic angular
momentum apart from the electromagnetic linear momentum. These properties
allow, among other things, a more flexible and efficient utilization of the
radio frequency spectrum. Implementation aspects are discussed and illustrated
by examples based on analytic and numerical solutions.Comment: Fixed LaTeX rendering errors due to inconsistencies between arXiv's
LaTeX machine and texlive in OpenSuSE 13.
Propagation in a Decoupled Twin-Core Waveguide: A Frequency-Domain Analysis
The behavior of two waveguides, which are decoupled at a single frequency when a broadband pulse is launched into one of them, was studied recently in the time domain. We reinvestigate it in the frequency domain. This contributes to the clarification of the scope of the validity of previous results and allows extending them to dispersive waveguides. New results include a power spectral density conservation law and a revised calculation of the pulse breakup distance
Phase transitions in open quantum systems
We consider the behaviour of open quantum systems in dependence on the
coupling to one decay channel by introducing the coupling parameter
being proportional to the average degree of overlapping. Under critical
conditions, a reorganization of the spectrum takes place which creates a
bifurcation of the time scales with respect to the lifetimes of the resonance
states. We derive analytically the conditions under which the reorganization
process can be understood as a second-order phase transition and illustrate our
results by numerical investigations. The conditions are fulfilled e.g. for a
picket fence with equal coupling of the states to the continuum. Energy
dependencies within the system are included. We consider also the generic case
of an unfolded Gaussian Orthogonal Ensemble. In all these cases, the
reorganization of the spectrum occurs at the critical value of
the control parameter globally over the whole energy range of the spectrum. All
states act cooperatively.Comment: 28 pages, 22 Postscript figure
Interfering Doorway States and Giant Resonances. I: Resonance Spectrum and Multipole Strengths
A phenomenological schematic model of multipole giant resonances (GR) is
considered which treats the external interaction via common decay channels on
the same footing as the coherent part of the internal residual interaction. The
damping due to the coupling to the sea of complicated states is neglected. As a
result, the formation of GR is governed by the interplay and competition of two
kinds of collectivity, the internal and the external one. The mixing of the
doorway components of a GR due to the external interaction influences
significantly their multipole strengths, widths and positions in energy. In
particular, a narrow resonance state with an appreciable multipole strength is
formed when the doorway components strongly overlap.Comment: 20 pages, LaTeX, 3 ps-figures, to appear in PRC (July 1997
Resonance trapping and saturation of decay widths
Resonance trapping appears in open many-particle quantum systems at high
level density when the coupling to the continuum of decay channels reaches a
critical strength. Here a reorganization of the system takes place and a
separation of different time scales appears. We investigate it under the
influence of additional weakly coupled channels as well as by taking into
account the real part of the coupling term between system and continuum. We
observe a saturation of the mean width of the trapped states. Also the decay
rates saturate as a function of the coupling strength. The mechanism of the
saturation is studied in detail. In any case, the critical region of
reorganization is enlarged. When the transmission coefficients for the
different channels are different, the width distribution is broadened as
compared to a chi_K^2 distribution where K is the number of channels. Resonance
trapping takes place before the broad state overlaps regions beyond the
extension of the spectrum of the closed system.Comment: 18 pages, 8 figures, accepted by Phys. Rev.
Eco-friendly one-pot synthesis of Prussian blue-embedded magnetic hydrogel beads for the removal of cesium from water
A simple one-step approach to fabricating Prussian blue-embedded magnetic hydrogel beads (PBMHBs) was fabricated for the effective magnetic removal of radioactive cesium (Cs-137) from water. Through the simple dropwise addition of a mixed aqueous solution of iron salts, commercial PB and polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) to an ammonium hydroxide (NH4OH) solution, the formation of hydrogel beads and the encapsulation of PB in beads were achieved in one pot through the gelation of PVA with in situ-formed iron oxide nanoparticles as the cross-linker. The obtained PB-MHBs, with 43.77 weight %of PB, were stable without releasing PB for up to 2 weeks and could be effectively separated from aqueous solutions by an external magnetic field, which is convenient for the large-scale treatment of Cs-contaminated water. Detailed Cs adsorption studies revealed that the adsorption isotherms and kinetics could be effectively described by the Langmuir isotherm model and the pseudo-second-order model, respectively. Most importantly, the PB-MHBs exhibited excellent selectivity for Cs-137 in (137)Cscontaminated simulated groundwater (55 Bq/g) with a high removal efficiency (>99.5%), and the effective removal of Cs-137 from real seawater by these PB-MHBs demonstrated the excellent potential of this material for practical application in the decontamination of Cs-137-contaminated seawate
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