93 research outputs found
Cancellation of atmospheric turbulence effects in entangled two-photon beams
Turbulent airflow in the atmosphere and the resulting random fluctuations in
its refractive index have long been known as a major cause of image
deterioration in astronomical imaging and figures among the obstacles for
reliable optical communication when information is encoded in the spatial
profile of a laser beam. Here we show that using correlation imaging and a
suitably prepared source of photon pairs, the most severe of the disturbances
inflicted on the beam by turbulence can be cancelled out. Other than a
two-photon light source, only linear passive optical elements are needed and,
as opposed to adaptive optics techniques, our scheme does not rely on active
wavefront correction.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Dose Optimisation and Scarce Resource Allocation: Two Sides of the Same Coin
Objective: A deep understanding of the relationship between a scarce drug\u27s dose and clinical response is necessary to appropriately distribute a supply-constrained drug along these lines.
Summary of key data: The vast majority of drug development and repurposing during the COVID-19 pandemic – an event that has made clear the ever-present scarcity in health care systems –has been ignorant of scarcity and dose optimisation\u27s ability to help address it.
Conclusions: Future pandemic clinical trials systems should obtain dose optimisation data, as these appear necessary to enable appropriate scarce resource allocation according to societal values
Photon Distribution Function for Long-Distance Propagation of Partially Coherent Beams through the Turbulent Atmosphere
The photon density operator function is used to calculate light beam
propagation through turbulent atmosphere. A kinetic equation for the photon
distribution function is derived and solved using the method of
characteristics. Optical wave correlations are described in terms of photon
trajectories that depend on fluctuations of the refractive index. It is shown
that both linear and quadratic disturbances produce sizable effects for
long-distance propagation. The quadratic terms are shown to suppress the
correlation of waves with different wave vectors. We examine the intensity
fluctuations of partially coherent beams (beams whose initial spatial coherence
is partially destroyed). Our calculations show that it is possible to
significantly reduce the intensity fluctuations by using a partially coherent
beam. The physical mechanism responsible for this pronounced reduction is
similar to that of the Hanbury-Braun, Twiss effect.Comment: 28 pages, 4 figure
Self-Averaging Scaling Limits of Two-Frequency Wigner Distribution for Random Paraxial Waves
Two-frequency Wigner distribution is introduced to capture the asymptotic
behavior of the space-frequency correlation of paraxial waves in the radiative
transfer limits. The scaling limits give rises to deterministic transport-like
equations. Depending on the ratio of the wavelength to the correlation length
the limiting equation is either a Boltzmann-like integral equation or a
Fokker-Planck-like differential equation in the phase space. The solutions to
these equations have a probabilistic representation which can be simulated by
Monte Carlo method. When the medium fluctuates more rapidly in the longitudinal
direction, the corresponding Fokker-Planck-like equation can be solved exactly.Comment: typos correcte
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MP3 - A meteorology and physical properties package to explore air-sea interaction on Titan
The exchange of mass, heat and momentum at the air:sea interface are profound influences on the terrestrial environment, affecting the intensity of hurricanes, the size of waves and lake-effect precipitation. Titan presents us with an opportunity to study these processes in a novel physical context, with a different sea, atmosphere and gravity. The MP3 instrument, under development for the proposed Discovery mission TiME (Titan Mare Explorer [1,2]) is an integrated suite of small, simple sensors that combines the function of traditional meteorology packages with liquid physical properties and depth-sounding : these latter functions follow the concept of - and indeed use spare elements from - the Huygens Surface Science Package (SSP,[3]). However, unlike Huygens’ brief and dynamic 3 hours of measurement, in TiME’s 6-Titan-day (96 Earth day) nominal mission enabled by radioisotope power, MP3 will have an unprecedented long-term measurement opportunity in one of the most evocative environments in the solar system, Titan’s sea Ligeia Mare
On time reversal mirrors
The concept of time reversal (TR) of scalar wave is reexamined from basic
principles. Five different time reversal mirrors (TRM) are introduced and their
relations are analyzed. For the boundary behavior, it is shown that for
paraxial wave only the monopole TR scheme satisfies the exact boundary
condition while for spherical wave only one of the mixed mode TR scheme, after
multiplication by two, satisfies the exact boundary condition. The asymptotic
analysis of the near-field focusing property is presented. It is shown that to
have a subwavelength focal spot the TRM should involve dipole fields. The
monopole TR is extremely ineffective to focus below wavelength as the focal
spot size decreases logarithmically with the distance between the source and
TRM. Contrary to the matched field processing and the phase processor, both of
which resemble TR, TR in a weak- or non-scattering medium is usually biased in
the longitudinal direction, especially when TR is carried out on a {\em single}
plane with a {finite} aperture. This is true for all five TR schemes. On the
other hand, the TR focal spot has been shown repeatedly in the literature, both
theoretically and experimentally, to be centered at the source point when the
medium is multiply scattering. A reconciliation of the two seemingly
conflicting results is found in the random fluctuations in the intensity of the
Green function for a multiply scattering medium and the notion of
scattering-enlarged effective aperture
Functional Anatomy of the Female Pelvic Floor
The anatomic structures in the female that prevent incontinence and genital organ prolapse on increases in abdominal pressure during daily activities include sphincteric and supportive systems. In the urethra, the action of the vesical neck and urethral sphincteric mechanisms maintains urethral closure pressure above bladder pressure. Decreases in the number of striated muscle fibers of the sphincter occur with age and parity. A supportive hammock under the urethra and vesical neck provides a firm backstop against which the urethra is compressed during increases in abdominal pressure to maintain urethral closure pressures above the rapidly increasing bladder pressure. This supporting layer consists of the anterior vaginal wall and the connective tissue that attaches it to the pelvic bones through the pubovaginal portion of the levator ani muscle, and the uterosacral and cardinal ligaments comprising the tendinous arch of the pelvic fascia. At rest the levator ani maintains closure of the urogenital hiatus. They are additionally recruited to maintain hiatal closure in the face of inertial loads related to visceral accelerations as well as abdominal pressurization in daily activities involving recruitment of the abdominal wall musculature and diaphragm. Vaginal birth is associated with an increased risk of levator ani defects, as well as genital organ prolapse and urinary incontinence. Computer models indicate that vaginal birth places the levator ani under tissue stretch ratios of up to 3.3 and the pudendal nerve under strains of up to 33%, respectively. Research is needed to better identify the pathomechanics of these conditions.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/72597/1/annals.1389.034.pd
Quantum teleportation and entanglement distribution over 100-kilometre free-space channels
A long standing goal for quantum communication is to transfer a quantum state
over arbitrary distances. Free-space quantum communication provides a promising
solution towards this challenging goal. Here, through a 97-km free space
channel, we demonstrate long distance quantum teleportation over a 35-53 dB
loss one-link channel, and entanglement distribution over a 66-85 dB high-loss
two-link channel. We achieve an average fidelity of {80.4(9)}% for teleporting
six distinct initial states and observe the violation of the
Clauser-Horne-Shimony-Holt inequality after distributing entanglement. Besides
being of fundamental interest, our result represents a significant step towards
a global quantum network. Moreover, the high-frequency and high-accuracy
acquiring, pointing and tracking technique developed in our experiment provides
an essential tool for future satellite-based quantum communication.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figure
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