1,277 research outputs found
Manipulation of ultracold atomic mixtures using microwave techniques
We used microwave radiation to evaporatively cool a mixture of of 133Cs and
87Rb atoms in a magnetic trap. A mixture composed of an equal number (around
10^4) of Rb and Cs atoms in their doubly polarized states at ultracold
temperatures was prepared. We also used microwaves to selectively evaporate
atoms in different Zeeman states.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figure
Analysis of ring laser gyroscopes including laser dynamics
Inertial sensors stimulate very large interest, not only for their
application but also for fundamental physics tests. Ring laser gyros, which
measure angular rotation rate, are certainly among the most sensitive inertial
sensors, with excellent dynamic range and bandwidth. Large area ring laser
gyros are routinely able to measure fractions of prad/s, with high duty cycle
and bandwidth, providing fast, direct and local measurement of relevant
geodetic and geophysical signals. Improvements of a factor would open
the windows for general relativity tests, as the GINGER project, an Earth based
experiment aiming at the Lense-Thirring test at level. However, it is
well known that the dynamics of the laser induces non-linearities, and those
effects are more evident in small scale instruments. Sensitivity and accuracy
improvements are always worthwhile, and in general there is demand for high
sensitivity environmental study and development of inertial platforms, where
small scale transportable instruments should be used. We discuss a novel
technique to analyse the data, aiming at studying and removing those
non-linearity. The analysis is applied to the two ring laser prototypes GP2 and
GINGERINO, and angular rotation rate evaluated with the new and standard
methods are compared. The improvement is evident, it shows that the
back-scatter problem of the ring laser gyros is negligible with a proper
analysis of the data, improving the performances of large scale ring laser
gyros, but also indicating that small scale instruments with sensitivity of
nrad/s are feasible.Comment: 9 pages and 7 figure
Ternatin and improved synthetic variants kill cancer cells by targeting the elongation factor-1A ternary complex.
Cyclic peptide natural products have evolved to exploit diverse protein targets, many of which control essential cellular processes. Inspired by a series of cyclic peptides with partially elucidated structures, we designed synthetic variants of ternatin, a cytotoxic and anti-adipogenic natural product whose molecular mode of action was unknown. The new ternatin variants are cytotoxic toward cancer cells, with up to 500-fold greater potency than ternatin itself. Using a ternatin photo-affinity probe, we identify the translation elongation factor-1A ternary complex (eEF1A·GTP·aminoacyl-tRNA) as a specific target and demonstrate competitive binding by the unrelated natural products, didemnin and cytotrienin. Mutations in domain III of eEF1A prevent ternatin binding and confer resistance to its cytotoxic effects, implicating the adjacent hydrophobic surface as a functional hot spot for eEF1A modulation. We conclude that the eukaryotic elongation factor-1A and its ternary complex with GTP and aminoacyl-tRNA are common targets for the evolution of cytotoxic natural products
Deep-well ultrafast manipulation of a SQUID flux qubit
Superconducting devices based on the Josephson effect are effectively used
for the implementation of qubits and quantum gates. The manipulation of
superconducting qubits is generally performed by using microwave pulses with
frequencies from 5 to 15 GHz, obtaining a typical operating clock from 100MHz
to 1GHz. A manipulation based on simple pulses in the absence of microwaves is
also possible. In our system a magnetic flux pulse modifies the potential of a
double SQUID qubit from a symmetric double well to a single deep well
condition. By using this scheme with a Nb/AlOx/Nb system we obtained coherent
oscillations with sub-nanosecond period (tunable from 50ps to 200ps), very fast
with respect to other manipulating procedures, and with a coherence time up to
10ns, of the order of what obtained with similar devices and technologies but
using microwave manipulation. We introduce the ultrafast manipulation
presenting experimental results, new issues related to this approach (such as
the use of a feedback procedure for cancelling the effect of "slow"
fluctuations), and open perspectives, such as the possible use of RSFQ logic
for the qubit control.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figure
Phase Transition Study of Superconducting Microstructures
The presented results are part of a feasibility study of superheated
superconducting microstructure detectors. The microstructures (dots) were
fabricated using thin film patterning techniques with diameters ranging from
m up to m and thickness of m. We used arrays and single
dots to study the dynamics of the superheating and supercooling phase
transitions in a magnetic field parallel to the dot surface. The phase transi-
tions were produced by either varying the applied magnetic field strength at a
constant temperature or changing the bath temperature at a constant field.
Preliminary results on the dynamics of the phase transitions of arrays and
single indium dots will be reported.Comment: 7pages in LaTex format, five figures available upon request by
[email protected], preprint Bu-He 93/
Effect of cosmic rays on the resonant gravitational wave detector NAUTILUS at temperature T=1.5 K
The interaction between cosmic rays and the gravitational wave bar detector
NAUTILUS is experimentally studied with the aluminum bar at temperature of
T=1.5 K. The results are compared with those obtained in the previous runs when
the bar was at T=0.14 K. The results of the run at T = 1.5 K are in agreement
with the thermo-acoustic model; no large signals at unexpected rate are
noticed, unlike the data taken in the run at T = 0.14 K. The observations
suggest a larger efficiency in the mechanism of conversion of the particle
energy into vibrational mode energy when the aluminum bar is in the
superconductive status.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, 2 tables. Accepted by Physics Letters
Horizontal rotation signals detected by "G-Pisa" ring laser for the Mw=9.0, March 2011, Japan earthquake
We report the observation of the ground rotation induced by the Mw=9.0, 11th
of March 2011, Japan earthquake. The rotation measurements have been conducted
with a ring laser gyroscope operating in a vertical plane, thus detecting
rotations around the horizontal axis. Comparison of ground rotations with
vertical accelerations from a co-located force-balance accelerometer shows
excellent ring laser coupling at periods longer than 100s. Under the plane wave
assumption, we derive a theoretical relationship between horizontal rotation
and vertical acceleration for Rayleigh waves. Due to the oblique mounting of
the gyroscope with respect to the wave direction-of-arrival, apparent
velocities derived from the acceleration / rotation rate ratio are expected to
be always larger than, or equal to the true wave propagation velocity. This
hypothesis is confirmed through comparison with fundamental-mode, Rayleigh wave
phase velocities predicted for a standard Earth model.Comment: Accepted for publication in Journal of Seismolog
Study of the coincidences between the gravitational wave detectors EXPLORER and NAUTILUS in 2001
We report the result from a search for bursts of gravitational waves using
data collected by the cryogenic resonant detectors EXPLORER and NAUTILUS during
the year 2001, for a total measuring time of 90 days. With these data we
repeated the coincidence search performed on the 1998 data (which showed a
small coincidence excess) applying data analysis algorithms based on known
physical characteristics of the detectors. With the 2001 data a new interesting
coincidence excess is found when the detectors are favorably oriented with
respect to the Galactic Disk
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