275 research outputs found
Protein connectivity in chemotaxis receptor complexes
The chemotaxis sensory system allows bacteria such as Escherichia coli to swim towards nutrients and away from repellents. The underlying pathway is remarkably sensitive in detecting chemical gradients over a wide range of ambient concentrations. Interactions among receptors, which are predominantly clustered at the cell poles, are crucial to this sensitivity. Although it has been suggested that the kinase CheA and the adapter protein CheW are integral for receptor connectivity, the exact coupling mechanism remains unclear. Here, we present a statistical-mechanics approach to model the receptor linkage mechanism itself, building on nanodisc and electron cryotomography experiments. Specifically, we investigate how the sensing behavior of mixed receptor clusters is affected by variations in the expression levels of CheA and CheW at a constant receptor density in the membrane. Our model compares favorably with dose-response curves from in vivo Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET) measurements, demonstrating that the receptor-methylation level has only minor effects on receptor cooperativity. Importantly, our model provides an explanation for the non-intuitive conclusion that the receptor cooperativity decreases with increasing levels of CheA, a core signaling protein associated with the receptors, whereas the receptor cooperativity increases with increasing levels of CheW, a key adapter protein. Finally, we propose an evolutionary advantage as explanation for the recently suggested CheW-only linker structures
Spin-Orbit Coupling and the Evolution of Transverse Spin
We investigate the evolution of transverse spin in tightly focused circularly
polarized beams of light, where spin-orbit coupling causes a local rotation of
the polarization ellipses upon propagation through the focal volume. The effect
can be explained as a relative Gouy-phase shift between the circularly
polarized transverse field and the longitudinal field carrying orbital angular
momentum. The corresponding rotation of the electric transverse spin density is
observed experimentally by utilizing a recently developed reconstruction
scheme, which relies on transverse-spin-dependent directional scattering of a
nano-probe.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
A noise-immune cavity-assisted non-destructive detection for an optical lattice clock in the quantum regime
We present and implement a non-destructive detection scheme for the
transition probability readout of an optical lattice clock. The scheme relies
on a differential heterodyne measurement of the dispersive properties of
lattice-trapped atoms enhanced by a high finesse cavity. By design, this scheme
offers a 1st order rejection of the technical noise sources, an enhanced
signal-to-noise ratio, and an homogeneous atom-cavity coupling. We
theoretically show that this scheme is optimal with respect to the photon shot
noise limit. We experimentally realize this detection scheme in an operational
strontium optical lattice clock. The resolution is on the order of a few atoms
with a photon scattering rate low enough to keep the atoms trapped after
detection. This scheme opens the door to various different interrogations
protocols, which reduce the frequency instability, including atom recycling,
zero-dead time clocks with a fast repetition rate, and sub quantum projection
noise frequency stability
Universal Loss Dynamics in a Unitary Bose Gas
The low temperature unitary Bose gas is a fundamental paradigm in few-body
and many-body physics, attracting wide theoretical and experimental interest.
Here we first present a theoretical model that describes the dynamic
competition between two-body evaporation and three-body re-combination in a
harmonically trapped unitary atomic gas above the condensation temperature. We
identify a universal magic trap depth where, within some parameter range,
evaporative cooling is balanced by recombination heating and the gas
temperature stays constant. Our model is developed for the usual
three-dimensional evaporation regime as well as the 2D evaporation case.
Experiments performed with unitary 133 Cs and 7 Li atoms fully support our
predictions and enable quantitative measurements of the 3-body recombination
rate in the low temperature domain. In particular, we measure for the first
time the Efimov inelasticity parameter * = 0.098(7) for the 47.8-G
d-wave Feshbach resonance in 133 Cs. Combined 133 Cs and 7 Li experimental data
allow investigations of loss dynamics over two orders of magnitude in
temperature and four orders of magnitude in three-body loss. We confirm the 1/T
2 temperature universality law up to the constant *
Lifetime of the Bose Gas with Resonant Interactions
We study the lifetime of a Bose gas at and around unitarity using a Feshbach
resonance in lithium~7. At unitarity, we measure the temperature dependence of
the three-body decay coefficient . Our data follow a law with \lambda_{3} = 2.5(3)_{stat}_(6)_{sys} 10^{-20}
(\mu K)^2 cm^6 s^{-1} and are in good agreement with our analytical result
based on the zero-range theory. Varying the scattering length at fixed
temperature, we investigate the crossover between the finite-temperature
unitary region and the previously studied regime where is smaller than
the thermal wavelength. We find that is continuous across resonance,
and over the whole range our data quantitatively agree with our
calculation
Large atom number dual-species magneto-optical trap for fermionic 6Li and 40K atoms
We present the design, implementation and characterization of a dual-species
magneto-optical trap (MOT) for fermionic 6Li and 40K atoms with large atom
numbers. The MOT simultaneously contains 5.2x10^9 6Li-atoms and 8.0x10^9
40K-atoms, which are continuously loaded by a Zeeman slower for 6Li and a
2D-MOT for 40K. The atom sources induce capture rates of 1.2x10^9 6Li-atoms/s
and 1.4x10^9 40K-atoms/s. Trap losses due to light-induced interspecies
collisions of ~65% were observed and could be minimized to ~10% by using low
magnetic field gradients and low light powers in the repumping light of both
atomic species. The described system represents the starting point for the
production of a large-atom number quantum degenerate Fermi-Fermi mixture
Constructing a chiral dipolar mode in an achiral nanostructure
We discuss the excitation of a chiral dipolar mode in an achiral silicon
nanoparticle. In particular, we make use of the electric and magnetic
polarizabilities of the silicon nanoparticle to construct this chiral
electromagnetic mode which is conceptually similar to the fundamental modes of
3D chiral nanostructures or molecules. We describe the chosen tailored
excitation with a beam carrying neither spin nor orbital angular momentum and
investigate the emission characteristics of the chiral dipolar mode in the
helicity basis, consisting of parallel electric and magnetic dipole moments,
phase shifted by . We demonstrate the wavelength dependence and
measure the spin and orbital angular momentum in the emission of the excited
chiral mode.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure
Orbital-to-Spin Angular Momentum Conversion Employing Local Helicity
Spin-orbit interactions in optics traditionally describe an influence of the
polarization degree of freedom of light on its spatial properties. The most
prominent example is the generation of a spin-dependent optical vortex upon
focusing or scattering of a circularly polarized plane-wave by a nanoparticle,
converting spin to orbital angular momentum of light. Here, we present a
mechanism of conversion of orbital-to-spin angular momentum of light upon
scattering of a linearly polarized vortex beam by a spherical silicon
nanoparticle. We show that focused linearly polarized Laguerre-Gaussian beams
of first order () exhibit an -dependent spatial
distribution of helicity density in the focal volume. By using a dipolar
scatterer the helicity density can be manipulated locally, while influencing
globally the spin and orbital angular momentum of the beam. Specifically, the
scattered light can be purely circularly polarized with the handedness
depending on the orbital angular momentum of the incident beam. We corroborate
our findings with theoretical calculations and an experimental demonstration.
Our work sheds new light on the global and local properties of helicity
conservation laws in electromagnetism.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, 1 tabl
An all-solid-state laser source at 671 nm for cold atom experiments with lithium
We present an all solid-state narrow line-width laser source emitting
output power at delivered in a
diffraction-limited beam. The \linebreak source is based on a
fre-quency-doubled diode-end-linebreak pumped ring laser operating on the
transition in Nd:YVO. By using
periodically-poled po-tassium titanyl phosphate (ppKTP) in an external build-up
cavity, doubling efficiencies of up to 86% are obtained. Tunability of the
source over is accomplished. We demonstrate the suitability of
this robust frequency-stabilized light source for laser cooling of lithium
atoms. Finally a simplified design based on intra-cavity doubling is described
and first results are presented
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