12,857 research outputs found
Two primary methods of proving gas flow meters
Methods for determining mass flow rates of gases for use in calibrating gas flowmeter
The Anisoplanatic Point Spread Function in Adaptive Optics
The effects of anisoplanatism on the adaptive optics point spread function
are investigated. A model is derived that combines observations of the guide
star with an analytic formulation of anisoplanatism to generate predictions for
the adaptive optics point spread function at arbitrary locations within the
field of view. The analytic formulation captures the dependencies of
anisoplanatism on aperture diameter, observing wavelength, angular offset,
zenith angle and turbulence profile. The predictions of this model are compared
to narrowband 2.12 um and 1.65 um images of a 21 arcsec binary (mV=7.3, 7.6)
acquired with the Palomar Adaptive Optics System on the Hale 5 meter telescope.
Contemporaneous measurements of the turbulence profile made with a DIMM/MASS
unit are used together with images of the primary to predict the point spread
function of the binary companion. Predicted companion Strehl ratios are shown
to match measurements to within a few percent, whereas predictions based on the
isoplanatic angle approximation are highly discrepant. The predicted companion
point spread functions are shown to agree with observations to 10%. These
predictions are used to measure the differential photometry between binary
members to an accuracy of 1 part in 10^{3}, and the differential astrometry to
an accuracy of 1 mas. Errors in the differential astrometry are shown to be
dominated by differential atmospheric tilt jitter. These results are compared
to other techniques that have been employed for photometry, astrometry, and
high contrast imaging.Comment: 26 pages, 7 figure
Arbitrary Waveform Generator for Quantum Information Processing with Trapped Ions
Atomic ions confined in multi-electrode traps have been proposed as a basis
for scalable quantum information processing. This scheme involves transporting
ions between spatially distinct locations by use of time-varying electric
potentials combined with laser or microwave pulses for quantum logic in
specific locations. We report the development of a fast multi-channel arbitrary
waveform generator for applying the time-varying electric potentials used for
transport and for shaping quantum logic pulses. The generator is based on a
field-programmable gate array controlled ensemble of 16-bit digital-to-analog
converters with an update frequency of 50 MHz and an output range of 10 V.
The update rate of the waveform generator is much faster than relevant motional
frequencies of the confined ions in our experiments, allowing diabatic control
of the ion motion. Numerous pre-loaded sets of time-varying voltages can be
selected with 40 ns latency conditioned on real-time signals. Here we describe
the device and demonstrate some of its uses in ion-based quantum information
experiments, including speed-up of ion transport and the shaping of laser and
microwave pulses
Passive Cooling of a Micromechanical Oscillator with a Resonant Electric Circuit
We cool the fundamental mode of a miniature cantilever by capacitively
coupling it to a driven rf resonant circuit. Cooling results from the rf
capacitive force, which is phase shifted relative to the cantilever motion. We
demonstrate the technique by cooling a 7 kHz cantilever from room temperature
to 45 K, obtaining reasonable agreement with a model for the cooling, damping,
and frequency shift. Extending the method to higher frequencies in a cryogenic
system could enable ground state cooling and may prove simpler than related
optical experiments in a low temperature apparatus.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures; minor changes to match published versio
Scalable arrays of RF Paul traps in degenerate Si
We report techniques for the fabrication of multi-zone linear RF Paul traps
that exploit the machinability and electrical conductivity of degenerate
silicon. The approach was tested by trapping and laser cooling 24Mg+ ions in
two trap geometries: a single-zone two-layer trap and a multi-zone
surface-electrode trap. From the measured ion motional heating rate we
determine an electric field spectral density at the ion's position of
approximately 1E-10 (V/m)^2/Hz at a frequency of 1.125 MHz when the ion lies 40
micron above the trap surface. One application of these devices is controlled
manipulation of atomic ion qubits, the basis of one form of quantum information
processing.Comment: 3 pages; 2 figures; v2: fix heating rate typ
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