574 research outputs found
Observation of long-lived polariton states in semiconductor microcavities across the parametric threshold
The excitation spectrum around the pump-only stationary state of a polariton
optical parametric oscillator (OPO) in semiconductor microcavities is
investigated by time-resolved photoluminescence. The response to a weak pulsed
perturbation in the vicinity of the idler mode is directly related to the
lifetime of the elementary excitations. A dramatic increase of the lifetime is
observed for a pump intensity approaching and exceeding the OPO threshold. The
observations can be explained in terms of a critical slowing down of the
dynamics upon approaching the threshold and the following onset of the soft
Goldstone mode
The colored Hanbury Brown--Twiss effect
The Hanbury Brown--Twiss effect is one of the celebrated phenomenologies of
modern physics that accommodates equally well classical (interferences of
waves) and quantum (correlations between indistinguishable particles)
interpretations. The effect was discovered in the late thirties with a basic
observation of Hanbury Brown that radio-pulses from two distinct antennas
generate signals on the oscilloscope that wiggle similarly to the naked eye.
When Hanbury Brown and his mathematician colleague Twiss took the obvious step
to propose bringing the effect in the optical range, they met with considerable
opposition as single-photon interferences were deemed impossible. The Hanbury
Brown--Twiss effect is nowadays universally accepted and, being so fundamental,
embodies many subtleties of our understanding of the wave/particle dual nature
of light. Thanks to a novel experimental technique, we report here a
generalized version of the Hanbury Brown--Twiss effect to include the frequency
of the detected light, or, from the particle point of view, the energy of the
detected photons. In addition to the known tendencies of indistinguishable
photons to arrive together on the detector, we find that photons of different
colors present the opposite characteristic of avoiding each others. We
postulate that fermions can be similarly brought to exhibit positive
(boson-like) correlations by frequency filtering.Comment: 18 pages, includes supplementary material of the derivation
Metagenomic microbial community profiling using unique clade-specific marker genes
Metagenomic shotgun sequencing data can identify microbes populating a microbial community and their proportions, but existing taxonomic profiling methods are inefficient for increasingly large datasets. We present an approach that uses clade-specific marker genes to unambiguously assign reads to microbial clades more accurately and >50× faster than current approaches. We validated MetaPhlAn on terabases of short reads and provide the largest metagenomic profiling to date of the human gu
Ultrafast control of Rabi oscillations in a polariton condensate
We report the experimental observation and control of space and time-resolved
light-matter Rabi oscillations in a microcavity. Our setup precision and the
system coherence are so high that coherent control can be implemented with
amplification or switching off of the oscillations and even erasing of the
polariton density by optical pulses. The data is reproduced by a fundamental
quantum optical model with excellent accuracy, providing new insights on the
key components that rule the polariton dynamics.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, supplementary 7 pages, 4 figures. Supplementary
videos:
https://drive.google.com/folderview?id=0B0QCllnLqdyBNjlMLTdjZlNhbTQ&usp=sharin
Vortex and half-vortex dynamics in a spinor quantum fluid of interacting polaritons
Spinorial or multi-component Bose-Einstein condensates may sustain fractional
quanta of circulation, vorticant topological excitations with half integer
windings of phase and polarization. Matter-light quantum fluids, such as
microcavity polaritons, represent a unique test bed for realising strongly
interacting and out-of-equilibrium condensates. The direct access to the phase
of their wavefunction enables us to pursue the quest of whether half vortices
---rather than full integer vortices--- are the fundamental topological
excitations of a spinor polariton fluid. Here, we are able to directly generate
by resonant pulsed excitations, a polariton fluid carrying either the half or
full vortex states as initial condition, and to follow their coherent evolution
using ultrafast holography. Surprisingly we observe a rich phenomenology that
shows a stable evolution of a phase singularity in a single component as well
as in the full vortex state, spiraling, splitting and branching of the initial
cores under different regimes and the proliferation of many vortex anti-vortex
pairs in self generated circular ripples. This allows us to devise the
interplay of nonlinearity and sample disorder in shaping the fluid and driving
the phase singularities dynamicsComment: New version complete with revised modelization, discussion and added
material. 8 pages, 7 figures. Supplementary videos:
https://drive.google.com/folderview?id=0B0QCllnLqdyBfmc2ai0yVF9fa2g2VnZodGUwemVkLThBb3BoOVRKRDJMS2dUdjlZdkRTQk
Efficient Parallel Statistical Model Checking of Biochemical Networks
We consider the problem of verifying stochastic models of biochemical
networks against behavioral properties expressed in temporal logic terms. Exact
probabilistic verification approaches such as, for example, CSL/PCTL model
checking, are undermined by a huge computational demand which rule them out for
most real case studies. Less demanding approaches, such as statistical model
checking, estimate the likelihood that a property is satisfied by sampling
executions out of the stochastic model. We propose a methodology for
efficiently estimating the likelihood that a LTL property P holds of a
stochastic model of a biochemical network. As with other statistical
verification techniques, the methodology we propose uses a stochastic
simulation algorithm for generating execution samples, however there are three
key aspects that improve the efficiency: first, the sample generation is driven
by on-the-fly verification of P which results in optimal overall simulation
time. Second, the confidence interval estimation for the probability of P to
hold is based on an efficient variant of the Wilson method which ensures a
faster convergence. Third, the whole methodology is designed according to a
parallel fashion and a prototype software tool has been implemented that
performs the sampling/verification process in parallel over an HPC
architecture
Merging of vortices and antivortices in polariton superfluids
Quantised vortices are remarkable manifestations on a macroscopic scale of the coherent nature of
quantum fluids, and the study of their properties is of fundamental importance for the understanding
of this peculiar state of matter. Cavity-polaritons, due to their double light-matter nature, offer
a unique controllable environment to investigate these properties. In this work we theoretically
investigate the possibility to deterministically achieve the annihilation of a vortex with an antivortex
through the increase of the polariton density in the region surrounding the vortices. Moreover we
demonstrate that by means of this mechanism an array of vortex-antivortex pairs can be completely
washed out
Interactions and scattering of quantum vortices in a polariton fluid
Quantum vortices, the quantized version of classical vortices, play a
prominent role in superfluid and superconductor phase transitions. However,
their exploration at a particle level in open quantum systems has gained
considerable attention only recently. Here we study vortex pair interactions in
a resonant polariton fluid created in a solid-state microcavity. By tracking
the vortices on picosecond time scales, we reveal the role of nonlinearity, as
well as of density and phase gradients, in driving their rotational dynamics.
Such effects are also responsible for the split of composite spin-vortex
molecules into elementary half-vortices, when seeding opposite vorticity
between the two spinorial components. Remarkably, we also observe that vortices
placed in close proximity experience a pull-push scenario leading to unusual
scattering-like events that can be described by a tunable effective potential.
Understanding vortex interactions can be useful in quantum hydrodynamics and in
the development of vortex-based lattices, gyroscopes, and logic devices.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures, Supplementary Material and 5 movies included in
arXi
- …
