5,754 research outputs found
Quantitative multielement analysis using high energy particle bombardment
Charged particles ranging in energy from 0.8 to 4.0 MeV are used to induce resonant nuclear reactions, Coulomb excitation (gamma X-rays), and X-ray emission in both thick and thin targets. Quantitative analysis is possible for elements from Li to Pb in complex environmental samples, although the matrix can severely reduce the sensitivity. It is necessary to use a comparator technique for the gamma-rays, while for X-rays an internal standard can be used. A USGS standard rock is analyzed for a total of 28 elements. Water samples can be analyzed either by nebulizing the sample doped with Cs or Y onto a thin formvar film or by extracting the sample (with or without an internal standard) onto ion exchange resin which is pressed into a pellet
Comparison of beam generation techniques using a phase only spatial light modulator
Whether in art or for QR codes, images have proven to be
both powerful and efficient carriers of information. Spatial light modulators
allow an unprecedented level of control over the generation of optical fields
by using digital holograms. There is no unique way of obtaining a desired
light pattern however, leaving many competing methods for hologram
generation. In this paper, we test six hologram generation techniques
in the creation of a variety of modes as well as a photographic image:
rating the methods according to obtained mode quality and power. All
techniques compensate for a non-uniform mode profile of the input laser
and incorporate amplitude scaling. We find that all methods perform well
and stress the importance of appropriate spatial filtering. We expect these
results to be of interest to those working in the contexts of microscopy,
optical trapping or quantum image creation
Spatially dependent electromagnetically induced transparency
Recent years have seen vast progress in the generation and detection of
structured light, with potential applications in high capacity optical data
storage and continuous variable quantum technologies. Here we measure the
transmission of structured light through cold rubidium atoms and observe
regions of electromagnetically induced transparency (EIT). We use q-plates to
generate a probe beam with azimuthally varying phase and polarisation
structure, and its right and left circular polarisation components provide the
probe and control of an EIT transition. We observe an azimuthal modulation of
the absorption profile that is dictated by the phase and polarisation structure
of the probe laser. Conventional EIT systems do not exhibit phase sensitivity.
We show, however, that a weak transverse magnetic field closes the EIT
transitions, thereby generating phase dependent dark states which in turn lead
to phase dependent transparency, in agreement with our measurements.Comment: 5 Pages, 5 Figure
Comparison of beam generation techniques using a phase only spatial light modulator
Whether in art or for QR codes, images have proven to be both powerful and efficient carriers of information. Spatial light modulators allow an unprecedented level of control over the generation of optical fields by using digital holograms. There is no unique way of obtaining a desired light pattern however, leaving many competing methods for hologram generation. In this paper, we test six hologram generation techniques in the creation of a variety of modes as well as a photographic image: rating the methods according to obtained mode quality and power. All techniques compensate for a non-uniform mode profile of the input laser and incorporate amplitude scaling. We find that all methods perform well and stress the importance of appropriate spatial filtering. We expect these results to be of interest to those working in the contexts of microscopy, optical trapping or quantum image creation
Fragmentation and Evolution of Molecular Clouds. II: The Effect of Dust Heating
We investigate the effect of heating by luminosity sources in a simulation of
clustered star formation. Our heating method involves a simplified continuum
radiative transfer method that calculates the dust temperature. The gas
temperature is set by the dust temperature. We present the results of four
simulations, two simulations assume an isothermal equation of state and the two
other simulations include dust heating. We investigate two mass regimes, i.e.,
84 Msun and 671 Msun, using these two different energetics algorithms. The mass
functions for the isothermal simulations and simulations which include dust
heating are drastically different. In the isothermal simulation, we do not form
any objects with masses above 1 Msun. However, the simulation with dust
heating, while missing some of the low-mass objects, forms high-mass objects
(~20 Msun) which have a distribution similar to the Salpeter IMF. The envelope
density profiles around the stars formed in our simulation match observed
values around isolated, low-mass star-forming cores. We find the accretion
rates to be highly variable and, on average, increasing with final stellar
mass. By including radiative feedback from stars in a cluster-scale simulation,
we have determined that it is a very important effect which drastically affects
the mass function and yields important insights into the formation of massive
stars.Comment: 19 pages, 28 figures. See
http://www.astro.phy.ulaval.ca/staff/hugo/dust/ms_dust.big.pdf for high
resolution version of documen
Holographically controlled three-dimensional atomic population patterns
The interaction of spatially structured light fields with atomic media can generate spatial structures inscribed in the atomic populations and coherences, allowing for example the storage of optical images in atomic vapours. Typically, this involves coherent optical processes based on Raman or EIT transitions. Here we study the simpler situation of shaping atomic populations via spatially dependent optical depletion. Using a near resonant laser beam with a holographically controlled 3D intensity profile, we imprint 3D population structures into a thermal rubidium vapour. This 3D population structure is simultaneously read out by recording the spatially resolved fluorescence of an unshaped probe laser. We find that the reconstructed atomic population structure is largely complementary to the intensity structure of the control beam, however appears blurred due to global repopulation processes. We identify and model these mechanisms which limit the achievable resolution of the 3D atomic population. We expect this work to set design criteria for future 2D and 3D atomic memories
The effects of verbal information on children's fear beliefs about social situations
Two experiments explored the role of verbal information in changing children’s fearrelated beliefs about social situations. In Experiment 1, 118 6- to 8- and 12- to 13-year-olds heard positive, negative, or no information about individuals’ experiences of three social situations. Fear beliefs regarding each situation were assessed before and after this manipulation. Verbal information had no significant influence on children’s fear beliefs. In Experiment 2, the same paradigm was used with 80 12- to 13-year-olds, but the information took the form of multiple attitude statements about the situations expressed by groups of peers, older children, or adults. An affective priming task of implicit attitudes was used to complement the explicit questions about fear beliefs. Negative information influenced both explicit and implicit fear beliefs. The source of information and the child’s own social anxiety did not moderate these effects. Implications for our understanding of the socialisation of childhood fears are discussed
Busting out: predictive brains, embodied minds, and the puzzle of the evidentiary veil
Biological brains are increasingly cast as ‘prediction machines’: evolved organs whose core operating principle is to learn about the world by trying to predict their own patterns of sensory stimulation. This, some argue, should lead us to embrace a brain‐bound ‘neurocentric’ vision of the mind. The mind, such views suggest, consists entirely in the skull‐bound activity of the predictive brain. In this paper I reject the inference from predictive brains to skull‐bound minds. Predictive brains, I hope to show, can be apt participants in larger cognitive circuits. The path is thus cleared for a new synthesis in which predictive brains act as entry‐points for ‘extended minds’, and embodiment and action contribute constitutively to knowing contact with the world
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