763 research outputs found
Spontaneous crystallization noise in mirrors of gravitational wave detectors
Core optics components for high precision measurements are made of stable
materials, having small optical and mechanical dissipation. The natural choice
in many cases is glass, in particular fused silica. Glass is a solid amorphous
state of material that couldn't become a crystal due to high viscosity. However
thermodynamically or externally activated stimulated local processes of
spontaneous crystallization (known as devitrification) are still possible.
Being random, these processes can produce an additional noise, and influence
the performance of such experiments as laser gravitational wave detection.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figure
Multiplexed DNA-Modified Electrodes
We report the use of silicon chips with 16 DNA-modified electrodes (DME chips) utilizing DNA-mediated charge transport for multiplexed detection of DNA and DNA-binding protein targets. Four DNA sequences were simultaneously distinguished on a single DME chip with 4-fold redundancy, including one incorporating a single base mismatch. These chips also enabled investigation of the sequence-specific activity of the restriction enzyme Alu1. DME chips supported dense DNA monolayer formation with high reproducibility, as confirmed by statistical comparison to commercially available rod electrodes. The working electrode areas on the chips were reduced to 10 μm in diameter, revealing microelectrode behavior that is beneficial for high sensitivity and rapid kinetic analysis. These results illustrate how DME chips facilitate sensitive and selective detection of DNA and DNA-binding protein targets in a robust and internally standardized multiplexed format
Synthesis and Properties of Dipyridylcyclopentenes
A short and general route to the substituted dipyridylcyclopentenes was explored and several new compounds belonging to this new group of diarylethenes were synthesized. The study of their photochromic and thermochromic properties shows that the rate of the thermal ring opening is strongly dependent on the polarity of the solvent.
Energetic Quantum Limit in Large-Scale Interferometers
For each optical topology of an interferometric gravitational wave detector,
quantum mechanics dictates a minimum optical power (the ``energetic quantum
limit'') to achieve a given sensitivity. For standard topologies, when one
seeks to beat the standard quantum limit by a substantial factor, the energetic
quantum limit becomes impossibly large. Intracavity readout schemes may do so
with manageable optical powers.Comment: Revised version; to be published in Proceedings of the 1999 Edoardo
Amaldi Conference on Gravitational Waves; 11 pages including figures;
manuscript is RevTex; figures are .eps; an AIP style file is include
Quantum bit detector
We propose and analyze an experimental scheme of quantum nondemolition
detection of monophotonic and vacuum states in a superconductive toroidal
cavity by means of Rydberg atoms.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
DNA binding shifts the redox potential of the transcription factor SoxR
Electrochemistry measurements on DNA-modified electrodes are used to probe the effects of binding to DNA on the redox potential of SoxR, a transcription factor that contains a [2Fe-2S] cluster and is activated through oxidation. A DNA-bound potential of +200 mV versus NHE (normal hydrogen electrode) is found for SoxR isolated from Escherichia coli and Pseudomonas aeruginosa. This potential value corresponds to a dramatic shift of +490 mV versus values found in the absence of DNA. Using Redmond red as a covalently bound redox reporter affixed above the SoxR binding site, we also see, associated with SoxR binding, an attenuation in the Redmond red signal compared with that for Redmond red attached below the SoxR binding site. This observation is consistent with a SoxR-binding-induced structural distortion in the DNA base stack that inhibits DNA-mediated charge transport to the Redmond red probe. The dramatic shift in potential for DNA-bound SoxR compared with the free form is thus reconciled based on a high-energy conformational change in the SoxR–DNA complex. The substantial positive shift in potential for DNA-bound SoxR furthermore indicates that, in the reducing intracellular environment, DNA-bound SoxR is primarily in the reduced form; the activation of DNA-bound SoxR would then be limited to strong oxidants, making SoxR an effective sensor for oxidative stress. These results more generally underscore the importance of using DNA electrochemistry to determine DNA-bound potentials for redox-sensitive transcription factors because such binding can dramatically affect this key protein property
Optimal Sizes of Dielectric Microspheres for Cavity QED with Strong Coupling
The whispering gallery modes (WGMs) of quartz microspheres are investigated
for the purpose of strong coupling between single photons and atoms in cavity
quantum electrodynamics (cavity QED). Within our current understanding of the
loss mechanisms of the WGMs, the saturation photon number, n, and critical atom
number, N, cannot be minimized simultaneously, so that an "optimal" sphere size
is taken to be the radius for which the geometric mean, (n x N)^(1/2), is
minimized. While a general treatment is given for the dimensionless parameters
used to characterize the atom-cavity system, detailed consideration is given to
the D2 transition in atomic Cesium (852nm) using fused-silica microspheres, for
which the maximum coupling coefficient g/(2*pi)=750MHz occurs for a sphere
radius a=3.63microns corresponding to the minimum for n=6.06x10^(-6). By
contrast, the minimum for N=9.00x10^(-6) occurs for a sphere radius of
a=8.12microns, while the optimal sphere size for which (n x N)^(1/2) is
minimized occurs at a=7.83microns. On an experimental front, we have fabricated
fused-silica microspheres with radii a=10microns and consistently observed
quality factors Q=0.8x10^(7). These results for the WGMs are compared with
corresponding parameters achieved in Fabry-Perot cavities to demonstrate the
significant potential of microspheres as a tool for cavity QED with strong
coupling.Comment: 12 pages, 14 figure
Transducing methyltransferase activity into electrical signals in a carbon nanotube–DNA device
This study creates a device where the DNA is electronically integrated to serve as both the biological target and electrical transducer in a CNT–DNA–CNT device. We detect DNA binding and methylation by the methyltransferase M.SssI at the single molecule level. We demonstrate sequence-specific, reversible binding of M.SssI and protein-catalyzed methylation that alters the protein-binding affinity of the device. This device, which relies on the exquisite electrical sensitivity of DNA, represents a unique route for the specific, single molecule detection of enzymatic activity
Whispering gallery mode resonator based ultra-narrow linewidth external cavity semiconductor laser
We demonstrate a miniature self-injection locked DFB laser using resonant
optical feedback from a high-Q crystalline whispering gallery mode resonator.
The linewidth reduction factor is greater than 10,000, with resultant
instantaneous linewidth less than 200 Hz. The minimal value of the Allan
deviation for the laser frequency stability is 3x10^(-12) at the integration
time of 20 us. The laser possesses excellent spectral purity and good long term
stability.Comment: To be published in Optics Letter
Cavity optomechanics with Si3N4 membranes at cryogenic temperatures
We describe a cryogenic cavity-optomechanical system that combines Si3N4
membranes with a mechanically-rigid Fabry-Perot cavity. The extremely high
quality-factor frequency products of the membranes allow us to cool a MHz
mechanical mode to a phonon occupation of less than 10, starting at a bath
temperature of 5 kelvin. We show that even at cold temperatures
thermally-occupied mechanical modes of the cavity elements can be a limitation,
and we discuss methods to reduce these effects sufficiently to achieve ground
state cooling. This promising new platform should have versatile uses for
hybrid devices and searches for radiation pressure shot noise.Comment: 19 pages, 5 figures, submitted to New Journal of Physic
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