1,004 research outputs found
Coherence properties of nanofiber-trapped cesium atoms
We experimentally study the ground state coherence properties of cesium atoms
in a nanofiber-based two-color dipole trap, localized 200 nm away from the
fiber surface. Using microwave radiation to coherently drive the clock
transition, we record Ramsey fringes as well as spin echo signals and infer a
reversible dephasing time ms and an irreversible dephasing time
ms. By theoretically modelling the signals, we find that, for
our experimental parameters, and are limited by the
finite initial temperature of the atomic ensemble and the heating rate,
respectively. Our results represent a fundamental step towards establishing
nanofiber-based traps for cold atoms as a building block in an optical fiber
quantum network
Back-Scattering Properties of a Waveguide-Coupled Array of Atoms in the Strongly Non-Paraxial Regime
We experimentally investigate the back-scattering properties of an array of
atoms that is evanescently coupled to an optical nanofiber in the strongly
non-paraxial regime. We observe that the power and the polarization of the
back-scattered light depend on the nanofiber-guided excitation field in a way
that significantly deviates from the predictions of a simple model based on
two-level atoms and a scalar waveguide. Even though it has been widely used in
previous experimental and theoretical studies of waveguide-coupled quantum
emitters, this simple model is thus in general not adequate even for a
qualitative description of such systems. We develop an ab initio model which
includes the multi-level structure of the atoms and the full vectorial
properties of the guided field and find very good agreement with our data
Optical diode based on the chirality of guided photons
Photons are nonchiral particles: their handedness can be both left and right.
However, when light is transversely confined, it can locally exhibit a
transverse spin whose orientation is fixed by the propagation direction of the
photons. Confined photons thus have chiral character. Here, we employ this to
demonstrate nonreciprocal transmission of light at the single-photon level
through a silica nanofibre in two experimental schemes. We either use an
ensemble of spin-polarised atoms that is weakly coupled to the nanofibre-guided
mode or a single spin-polarised atom strongly coupled to the nanofibre via a
whispering-gallery-mode resonator. We simultaneously achieve high optical
isolation and high forward transmission. Both are controlled by the internal
atomic state. The resulting optical diode is the first example of a new class
of nonreciprocal nanophotonic devices which exploit the chirality of confined
photons and which are, in principle, suitable for quantum information
processing and future quantum optical networks
Potential for long-term transfer of dissolved organic carbon from riparian zones to streams in boreal catchments
Boreal regions store most of the global terrestrial carbon, which can be transferred as dissolved organic carbon (DOC) to inland waters with implications for both aquatic ecology and carbon budgets. Headwater riparian zones (RZ) are important sources of DOC, and often just a narrow ‘dominant source layer' (DSL) within the riparian profile is responsible for most of the DOC export. Two important questions arise: how long boreal RZ could sustain lateral DOC fluxes as the sole source of exported carbon and how its hydromorphological variability influences this role. We estimate theoretical turnover times by comparing carbon pools and lateral exports in the DSL of 13 riparian profiles distributed over a 69km2 catchment in northern Sweden. The thickness of the DSL was 36±18 (average ± SD) cm. Thus, only about one-third of the 1-m-deep riparian profile contributed 90% of the lateral DOC flux. The 13 RZ exported 8.7±6.5g C m-2year-1, covering the whole range of boreal stream DOC exports. The variation could be explained by local hydromorphological characteristics including RZ width (R2=0.90). The estimated theoretical turnover times were hundreds to a few thousands of years, that is there is a potential long-lasting supply of DOC. Estimates of net ecosystem production in the RZ suggest that lateral fluxes, including both organic and inorganic C, could be maintained without drawing down the riparian pools. This was supported by measurements of stream DO14C that indicated modern carbon as the predominant fraction exported, including streams disturbed by ditching. The transfer of DOC into boreal inland waters from new and old carbon sources has a major influence on surface water quality and global carbon balances. This study highlights the importance of local variations in RZ hydromorphology and DSL extent for future DOC fluxes under a changing climate
Forested wetlands for water resource management in southern Illinois
A 30 ha cypress - tupelo (Taxodium distichum - Nyssa aquatics), floodplain swamp in Southern Illinois was studied for its hydrologic, biogeochemical and ecological characteristics. The hydrology, water chemistry, sediment dynamics and ecosystem productivity were described for the swamp and interactions with the adjacent Cache River were emphasized. A representative flood in the spring spilled water and sediments from the river to the swamp, temporarily reversing the normal flow of water from the swamp to the river. The annual hydrology budget for the swamp showed inflows of 7'4.4 cm throughfall, 63.9 cm runoff, and 21.9 cm groundwater; the outflows were 7'2.8 cm evapotranspiration, 54.9 cm surface outflow, and 21.0 cm groundwater, the latter two draining to the river. Loading rates for several chemical parameters were calculated from the swamp to the river and water chemistry of the swamp and river was contrasted. Primary productivity measurements showed high rates when the floating duckweed was included; cypress productivity was shown historically to be related to amount of flooding. A phosphorus budget was determined for the swamp and this indicated that the flooding river contributed over 10 times the phosphorus to the swamp as was discharged the rest of the year.U.S. Department of the InteriorU.S. Geological SurveyOpe
Estimation and comparison of gross primary productivity patterns in created riparian wetlands
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A New Simulation Metric to Determine Safe Environments and Controllers for Systems with Unknown Dynamics
We consider the problem of extracting safe environments and controllers for
reach-avoid objectives for systems with known state and control spaces, but
unknown dynamics. In a given environment, a common approach is to synthesize a
controller from an abstraction or a model of the system (potentially learned
from data). However, in many situations, the relationship between the dynamics
of the model and the \textit{actual system} is not known; and hence it is
difficult to provide safety guarantees for the system. In such cases, the
Standard Simulation Metric (SSM), defined as the worst-case norm distance
between the model and the system output trajectories, can be used to modify a
reach-avoid specification for the system into a more stringent specification
for the abstraction. Nevertheless, the obtained distance, and hence the
modified specification, can be quite conservative. This limits the set of
environments for which a safe controller can be obtained. We propose SPEC, a
specification-centric simulation metric, which overcomes these limitations by
computing the distance using only the trajectories that violate the
specification for the system. We show that modifying a reach-avoid
specification with SPEC allows us to synthesize a safe controller for a larger
set of environments compared to SSM. We also propose a probabilistic method to
compute SPEC for a general class of systems. Case studies using simulators for
quadrotors and autonomous cars illustrate the advantages of the proposed metric
for determining safe environment sets and controllers.Comment: 22nd ACM International Conference on Hybrid Systems: Computation and
Control (2019
Dispersive Optical Interface Based on Nanofiber-Trapped Atoms
We dispersively interface an ensemble of one thousand atoms trapped in the
evanescent field surrounding a tapered optical nanofiber. This method relies on
the azimuthally-asymmetric coupling of the ensemble with the evanescent field
of an off-resonant probe beam, transmitted through the nanofiber. The resulting
birefringence and dispersion are significant; we observe a phase shift per atom
of \,1\,mrad at a detuning of six times the natural linewidth,
corresponding to an effective resonant optical density per atom of 0.027.
Moreover, we utilize this strong dispersion to non-destructively determine the
number of atoms.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Asteroseismological Observations of the Central Star of the Planetary Nebula NGC 1501
We report on a global CCD time-series photometric campaign to decode the
pulsations of the nucleus of the planetary nebula NGC1501. The star is hot and
hydrogen-deficient, similar to the pre-white-dwarf PG 1159 stars. NGC1501 shows
pulsational brightness variations of a few percent with periods ranging from 19
to 87 minutes. The variations are very complex, suggesting a pulsation spectrum
that requires a long unbroken time series to resolve. Our CCD photometry of the
star covers a two-week period in 1991 November, and used a global network of
observatories. We obtained nearly continuous coverage over an interval of one
week in the middle of the run. We have identified 10 pulsation periods, ranging
from 5235 s down to 1154 s. We find strong evidence that the modes are indeed
nonradial g-modes. The ratios of the frequencies of the largest-amplitude modes
agree with those expected for modes that are trapped by a density discontinuity
in the outer layers. We offer a model for the pulsation spectrum that includes
a common period spacing of 22.3 s and a rotation period of 1.17 days; the
period spacing allows us to assign a seismological mass of 0.55+/-0.03 Msun.Comment: 12 pages, AASTEX, 7 tables, 6 EPS figures, to appear in AJ, 12/96
Corrected version repairs table formatting and adds missing Table
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