10,695 research outputs found
Observation of force-detected nuclear magnetic resonance in a homogeneous field
We report the experimental realization of BOOMERANG (better observation of magnetization, enhanced resolution, and no gradient), a sensitive and general method of magnetic resonance. The prototype millimeter-scale NMR spectrometer shows signal and noise levels in agreement with the design principles. We present H-1 and F-19 NMR in both solid and liquid samples, including time-domain Fourier transform NMR spectroscopy, multiple-pulse echoes, and heteronuclear J spectroscopy. By measuring a H-1-F-19 J coupling, this last experiment accomplishes chemically specific spectroscopy with force-detected NMR. In BOOMERANG, an assembly of permanent magnets provides a homogeneous field throughout the sample, while a harmonically suspended part of the assembly, a detector, is mechanically driven by spin-dependent forces. By placing the sample in a homogeneous field, signal dephasing by diffusion in a field gradient is made negligible, enabling application to liquids, in contrast to other force-detection methods. The design appears readily scalable to µm-scale samples where it should have sensitivity advantages over inductive detection with microcoils and where it holds great promise for application of magnetic resonance in biology, chemistry, physics, and surface science. We briefly discuss extensions of the BOOMERANG method to the µm and nm scales
The Chandrasekhar limit for quark stars
The Chandrasekhar limit for quark stars is evaluated from simple energy
balance relations, as proposed by Landau for white dwarfs or neutron stars. It
has been found that the limit for quark stars depends on, in addition to the
fundamental constants, the Bag constant.Comment: LateX fil
Experimental Bell Inequality Violation with an Atom and a Photon
We report the measurement of a Bell inequality violation with a single atom
and a single photon prepared in a probabilistic entangled state. This is the
first demonstration of such a violation with particles of different species.
The entanglement characterization of this hybrid system may also be useful in
quantum information applications.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Color singlet suppression of quark-gluon plasma formation
The rate of quark-gluon plasma droplet nucleation in superheated hadronic
matter is calculated within the MIT bag model. The requirements of color
singletness and (to less extent) fixed momentum suppress the nucleation rate by
many orders of magnitude, making thermal nucleation of quark-gluon plasma
droplets unlikely in ultrarelativistic heavy-ion collisions if the transition
is first order and reasonably described by the bag model.Comment: 9 pages, 3 ps figures. To appear in PhysRevC (April 1996
How to identify a Strange Star
Contrary to young neutron stars, young strange stars are not subject to the
r-mode instability which slows rapidly rotating, hot neutron stars to rotation
periods near 10 ms via gravitational wave emission. Young millisecond pulsars
are therefore likely to be strange stars rather than neutron stars, or at least
to contain significant quantities of quark matter in the interior.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur
Probabilistic state preparation of a single molecular ion by projection measurement
We show how to prepare a single molecular ion in a specific internal quantum
state in a situation where the molecule is trapped and sympathetically cooled
by an atomic ion and where its internal degrees of freedom are initially in
thermal equilibrium with the surroundings. The scheme is based on conditional
creation of correlation between the internal state of the molecule and the
translational state of the collective motion of the two ions, followed by a
projection measurement of this collective mode by atomic ion shelving
techniques. State preparation in a large number of internal states is possible.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, 2 table
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