1,113 research outputs found
Transfer of Vibrational Coherence Through Incoherent Energy Transfer Process in F\"{o}rster Limi
We study transfer of coherent nuclear oscillations between an excitation
energy donor and an acceptor in a simple dimeric electronic system coupled to
an unstructured thermodynamic bath and some pronounced vibrational
intramolecular mode. Our focus is on the non-linear optical response of such a
system, i.e. we study both excited state energy transfer and the compensation
of the so-called ground state bleach signal. The response function formalism
enables us to investigate a heterodimer with monomers coupled strongly to the
bath and by a weak resonance coupling to each other (F\"{o}rster rate limit).
Our work is motivated by recent observation of various vibrational signatures
in 2D coherent spectra of energy transferring systems including large
structures with a fast energy diffusion. We find that the vibrational coherence
can be transferred from donor to acceptor molecules provided the transfer rate
is sufficiently fast. The ground state bleach signal of the acceptor molecules
does not show any oscillatory signatures, and oscillations in ground state
bleaching signal of the donor prevail with the amplitude which is not
decreasing with the relaxation rate.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figure
Forecasting volcanic ash dispersal and coeval resuspension during the April-May 2015 Calbuco eruption
Atmospheric dispersion of volcanic ash from explosive eruptions or from subsequent fallout deposit resuspension causes a range of impacts and disruptions on human activities and ecosystems. The April-May 2015 Calbuco eruption in Chile involved eruption and resuspension activities. We overview the chronology, effects, and products resulting from these events, in order to validate an operational forecast strategy for tephra dispersal. The modelling strategy builds on coupling the meteorological Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF/ARW) model with the FALL3D dispersal model for eruptive and resuspension processes. The eruption modelling considers two distinct particle granulometries, a preliminary first guess distribution used operationally when no field data was available yet, and a refined distribution based on field measurements. Volcanological inputs were inferred from eruption reports and results from an Argentina-Chilean ash sample data network, which performed in-situ sampling during the eruption. In order to validate the modelling strategy, results were compared with satellite retrievals and ground deposit measurements. Results indicate that the WRF-FALL3D modelling system can provide reasonable forecasts in both eruption and resuspension modes, particularly when the adjusted granulometry is considered. The study also highlights the importance of having dedicated datasets of active volcanoes furnishing first-guess model inputs during the early stages of an eruption.Fil: Reckziegel, Florencia Mabel. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - Salta. Instituto de Investigaciones en Energía no Convencional. Universidad Nacional de Salta. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas. Departamento de Física. Instituto de Investigaciones en Energía no Convencional; ArgentinaFil: Bustos, Emilce. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - Salta. Instituto de Investigaciones en Energía no Convencional. Universidad Nacional de Salta. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas. Departamento de Física. Instituto de Investigaciones en Energía no Convencional; ArgentinaFil: Leonardo, Mingari. Ministerio de Defensa. Secretaria de Planeamiento. Servicio Meteorológico Nacional; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas; ArgentinaFil: Baez, Walter Ariel. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - Salta. Instituto de Investigaciones en Energía no Convencional. Universidad Nacional de Salta. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas. Departamento de Física. Instituto de Investigaciones en Energía no Convencional; ArgentinaFil: Villarosa, Gustavo. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - Patagonia Norte. Instituto de Investigaciones en Biodiversidad y Medioambiente. Universidad Nacional del Comahue. Centro Regional Universidad Bariloche. Instituto de Investigaciones en Biodiversidad y Medioambiente; ArgentinaFil: Folch Duran, Arnau. Barcelona Supercomputing Center - Centro Nacional de Supercomputacion; EspañaFil: Collini, E.. Ministerio de Defensa. Secretaria de Planeamiento. Servicio Meteorológico Nacional; Argentina. Ministerio de Defensa. Armada Argentina. Servicio de Hidrografía Naval; ArgentinaFil: Viramonte, Jose German. Universidad Nacional de Salta; ArgentinaFil: Romero, J.. Centro de Investigación y Difusión de Volcanes de Chile; Chile. Universidad de Atacama; ChileFil: Osores, María Soledad. Comision Nacional de Actividades Espaciales; Argentina. Ministerio de Defensa. Secretaria de Planeamiento. Servicio Meteorológico Nacional; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas; Argentin
Microcavity controlled coupling of excitonic qubits
Controlled non-local energy and coherence transfer enables light harvesting
in photosynthesis and non-local logical operations in quantum computing. The
most relevant mechanism of coherent coupling of distant qubits is coupling via
the electromagnetic field. Here, we demonstrate the controlled coherent
coupling of spatially separated excitonic qubits via the photon mode of a solid
state microresonator. This is revealed by two-dimensional spectroscopy of the
sample's coherent response, a sensitive and selective probe of the coherent
coupling. The experimental results are quantitatively described by a rigorous
theory of the cavity mediated coupling within a cluster of quantum dots
excitons. Having demonstrated this mechanism, it can be used in extended
coupling channels - sculptured, for instance, in photonic crystal cavities - to
enable a long-range, non-local wiring up of individual emitters in solids
Long-lived quantum coherence in photosynthetic complexes at physiological temperature
Photosynthetic antenna complexes capture and concentrate solar radiation by
transferring the excitation to the reaction center which stores energy from the
photon in chemical bonds. This process occurs with near-perfect quantum
efficiency. Recent experiments at cryogenic temperatures have revealed that
coherent energy transfer - a wavelike transfer mechanism - occurs in many
photosynthetic pigment-protein complexes (1-4). Using the Fenna-Matthews-Olson
antenna complex (FMO) as a model system, theoretical studies incorporating both
incoherent and coherent transfer as well as thermal dephasing predict that
environmentally assisted quantum transfer efficiency peaks near physiological
temperature; these studies further show that this process is equivalent to a
quantum random walk algorithm (5-8). This theory requires long-lived quantum
coherence at room temperature, which never has been observed in FMO. Here we
present the first evidence that quantum coherence survives in FMO at
physiological temperature for at least 300 fs, long enough to perform a
rudimentary quantum computational operation. This data proves that the
wave-like energy transfer process discovered at 77 K is directly relevant to
biological function. Microscopically, we attribute this long coherence lifetime
to correlated motions within the protein matrix encapsulating the chromophores,
and we find that the degree of protection afforded by the protein appears
constant between 77 K and 277 K. The protein shapes the energy landscape and
mediates an efficient energy transfer despite thermal fluctuations. The
persistence of quantum coherence in a dynamic, disordered system under these
conditions suggests a new biomimetic strategy for designing dedicated quantum
computational devices that can operate at high temperature.Comment: PDF files, 15 pages, 3 figures (included in the PDF file
Quantum transport in quantum networks and photosynthetic complexes at the steady state
Recently, several works have analysed the efficiency of photosynthetic
complexes in a transient scenario and how that efficiency is affected by
environmental noise. Here, following a quantum master equation approach, we
study the energy and excitation transport in fully connected networks both in
general and in the particular case of the Fenna-Matthew-Olson complex. The
analysis is carried out for the steady state of the system where the excitation
energy is constantly "flowing" through the system. Steady state transport
scenarios are particularly relevant if the evolution of the quantum system is
not conditioned on the arrival of individual excitations. By adding dephasing
to the system, we analyse the possibility of noise-enhancement of the quantum
transport.Comment: 10 pages, single column, 6 figures. Accepted for publication in Plos
On
Measurement of charged particle yields from therapeutic beams in view of the design of an innovative hadrontherapy dose monitor
Particle Therapy (PT) is an emerging technique, which makes use of charged particles to efficiently cure different kinds of solid tumors. The high precision in the hadrons dose deposition requires an accurate monitoring to prevent the risk of under-dosage of the cancer region or of over-dosage of healthy tissues. Monitoring techniques are currently being developed and are based on the detection of particles produced by the beam interaction into the target, in particular: charged particles, result of target and/or projectile fragmentation, prompt photons coming from nucleus de-excitation and back-to-back γ s, produced in the positron annihilation from β + emitters created in the beam interaction with the target. It has been showed that the hadron beam dose release peak can be spatially correlated with the emission pattern of these secondary particles. Here we report about secondary particles production (charged fragments and prompt γ s) performed at different beam and energies that have a particular relevance for PT applications: 12C beam of 80 MeV/u at LNS, 12C beam 220 MeV/u at GSI, and 12C, 4He, 16O beams with energy in the 50–300 MeV/u range at HIT. Finally, a project for a multimodal dose-monitor device exploiting the prompt photons and charged particles emission will be presented
Quantum biology on the edge of quantum chaos
We give a new explanation for why some biological systems can stay quantum
coherent for long times at room temperatures, one of the fundamental puzzles of
quantum biology. We show that systems with the right level of complexity
between chaos and regularity can increase their coherence time by orders of
magnitude. Systems near Critical Quantum Chaos or Metal-Insulator Transition
(MIT) can have long coherence times and coherent transport at the same time.
The new theory tested in a realistic light harvesting system model can
reproduce the scaling of critical fluctuations reported in recent experiments.
Scaling of return probability in the FMO light harvesting complex shows the
signs of universal return probability decay observed at critical MIT. The
results may open up new possibilities to design low loss energy and information
transport systems in this Poised Realm hovering reversibly between quantum
coherence and classicality
Quantum Mechanical Aspects of Cell Microtubules: Science Fiction or Realistic Possibility?
Recent experimental research with marine algae points towards quantum
entanglement at ambient temperature, with correlations between essential
biological units separated by distances as long as 20 Angstr\"oms. The
associated decoherence times, due to environmental influences, are found to be
of order 400 fs. This prompted some authors to connect such findings with the
possibility of some kind of quantum computation taking place in these
biological entities: within the decoherence time scales, the cell "quantum
calculates" the optimal "path" along which energy and signal would be
transported more efficiently. Prompted by these experimental results, in this
talk I remind the audience of a related topic proposed several years ago in
connection with the possible r\^ole of quantum mechanics and/or field theory on
dissipation-free energy transfer in microtubules (MT), which constitute
fundamental cell substructures. Quantum entanglement between tubulin dimers was
argued to be possible, provided there exists sufficient isolation from other
environmental cell effects. The model was based on certain ferroelectric
aspects of MT. In the talk I review the model and the associated experimental
tests so far and discuss future directions, especially in view of the algae
photo-experiments.Comment: 31 pages latex, 11 pdf figures, uses special macros, Invited Plenary
Talk at DICE2010, Castello Pasquini, Castiglioncello (Italy), September 13-18
201
Educating consent? A conversation with Noam Chomsky on the university and business school education
In what follows, we present a conversation with Professor Noam Chomsky on the topic of whether the business school might be a site for progressive political change. The conversation covers a number of key issues related to pedagogy, corporate social responsibility and working conditions in the contemporary business school. We hope the conversion will contribute to the ongoing discussion about the role of the business school in neoliberal societies
Ab-Initio Calculation of Molecular Aggregation Effects: a Coumarin-343 Case Study
We present time-dependent density functional theory (TDDFT) calculations for
single and dimerized Coumarin-343 molecules in order to investigate the quantum
mechanical effects of chromophore aggregation in extended systems designed to
function as a new generation of sensors and light-harvesting devices. Using the
single-chromophore results, we describe the construction of effective
Hamiltonians to predict the excitonic properties of aggregate systems. We
compare the electronic coupling properties predicted by such effective
Hamiltonians to those obtained from TDDFT calculations of dimers, and to the
coupling predicted by the transition density cube (TDC) method. We determine
the accuracy of the dipole-dipole approximation and TDC with respect to the
separation distance and orientation of the dimers. In particular, we
investigate the effects of including Coulomb coupling terms ignored in the
typical tight-binding effective Hamiltonian. We also examine effects of orbital
relaxation which cannot be captured by either of these models
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