2,580,545 research outputs found
Asymmetric transmission of light through a planar chiral metamaterial
We report that normal incidence transmission of circularly polarized light through lossy anisotropic planar chiral meta-material is asymmetric for opposite directions. The new effect is fundamentally distinct from conventional gyrotropy of bulk chiral media and the Faraday Effect
Early handling and repeated cross-fostering have opposite effect on mouse emotionality
Early life events have a crucial role in programming the individual phenotype and exposure to traumatic experiences during infancy can increase later risk for a variety of neuropsychiatric conditions, including mood and anxiety disorders. Animal models of postnatal stress have been developed in rodents to explore molecular mechanisms responsible for the observed short and long lasting neurobiological effects of such manipulations. The main aim of this study was to compare the behavioral and hormonal phenotype of young and adult animals exposed to different postnatal treatments. Outbred mice were exposed to (i) the classical Handling protocol (H: 15 min-day of separation from the mother from day 1 to 14 of life) or to (ii) a Repeated Cross-Fostering protocol (RCF: adoption of litters from day 1 to 4 of life by different dams). Handled mice received more maternal care in infancy and showed the already described reduced emotionality at adulthood. Repeated cross fostered animals did not differ for maternal care received, but showed enhanced sensitivity to separation from the mother in infancy and altered respiratory response to 6% CO2 in breathing air in comparison with controls. Abnormal respiratory responses to hypercapnia are commonly found among humans with panic disorders (PD), and point to RCF-induced instability of the early environment as a valid developmental model for PD. The comparisons between short-and long-term effects of postnatal handling vs. RCF indicate that different types of early adversities are associated with different behavioral profiles, and evoke psychopathologies that can be distinguished according to the neurobiological systems disrupted by early-life manipulation
Spin Hall Effect in Atoms
We propose an optical means to realize a spin hall effect (SHE) in neutral
atomic system by coupling the internal spin states of atoms to radiation. The
interaction between the external optical fields and the atoms creates effective
magnetic fields that act in opposite directions on "electrically" neutral atoms
with opposite spin polarizations. This effect leads to a Landau level structure
for each spin orientation in direct analogy with the familiar SHE in
semiconductors. The conservation and topological properties of the spin
current, and the creation of a pure spin current are discussed.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure; Final versio
Spin-valley filtering in strained graphene structures with artificially induced carrier mass and spin-orbit coupling
The interplay of massive electrons with spin-orbit coupling in bulk graphene
results in a spin-valley dependent gap. Thus, a barrier with such properties
can act as a filter, transmitting only opposite spins from opposite valleys. In
this Letter we show that strain induced pseudomagnetic field in such a barrier
will enforce opposite cyclotron trajectories for the filtered valleys, leading
to their spatial separation. Since spin is coupled to the valley in the
filtered states, this also leads to spin separation, demonstrating a
spin-valley filtering effect. The filtering behavior is found to be
controllable by electrical gating as well as by strain
Stochasticity effects in quantum radiation reaction
When an ultrarelativistic electron beam collides with a sufficiently intense
laser pulse, radiation-reaction effects can strongly alter the beam dynamics.
In the realm of classical electrodynamics, radiation reaction has a beneficial
effect on the electron beam as it tends to reduce its energy spread. Here, we
show that when quantum effects become important, radiation reaction induces the
opposite effect, i.e., the electron beam spreads out after interacting with the
laser pulse. We identify the physical origin of this opposite tendency in the
intrinsic stochasticity of photon emission, which becomes substantial in the
full quantum regime. Our numerical simulations indicated that the predicted
effects of the stochasticity can be measured already with presently available
lasers and electron accelerators.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
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