Reading today…

Reading today…

An unexpected and slightly different topic today:

Gravitational properties of light—the gravitational field of a laser pulse

Dennis Rätzel, Martin Wilkens and Ralf Menzel
New Journal of Physics, Volume 18, February 2016

It’s well worth taking a few minutes to watch the video (below)!  The image above shows the world sheet for a laser pulse (fig. 2 in the paper).

Abstract:

The gravitational field of a laser pulse of finite lifetime, is investigated in the framework of linearized gravity. Although the effects are very small, they may be of fundamental physical interest. It is shown that the gravitational field of a linearly polarized light pulse is modulated as the norm of the corresponding electric field strength, while no modulations arise for circular polarization. In general, the gravitational field is independent of the polarization direction. It is shown that all physical effects are confined to spherical shells expanding with the speed of light, and that these shells are imprints of the spacetime events representing emission and absorption of the pulse. Nearby test particles at rest are attracted towards the pulse trajectory by the gravitational field due to the emission of the pulse, and they are repelled from the pulse trajectory by the gravitational field due to its absorption. Examples are given for the size of the attractive effect. It is recovered that massless test particles do not experience any physical effect if they are co-propagating with the pulse, and that the acceleration of massless test particles counter-propagating with respect to the pulse is four times stronger than for massive particles at rest. The similarities between the gravitational effect of a laser pulse and Newtonian gravity in two dimensions are pointed out. The spacetime curvature close to the pulse is compared to that induced by gravitational waves from astronomical sources.

Reading today…

Reading today…

Time‐of‐Flight Mass Spectrometer with Improved Resolution

Rev. Sci. Instrum. 26, 1150 (1955); http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.1715212

 

An oldie, but a goodie, from 1955.  A great primer for time-of-flight mass spectrometer design, and the introduction of space-focussing field design.

 

wiley-maclaren

 

Reading today…

Reading today…

Quantum imaging with undetected photons

Gabriela Barreto Lemos, Victoria Borish, Garrett D. Cole, Sven Ramelow, Radek Lapkiewicz & Anton Zeilinger

Nature 512, 409–412 (2014)

doi:10.1038/nature13586

Interferometric imaging based on photon pairs, from the intro:

Information is central to quantum mechanics. In particular, quantum interference occurs only if there exists no information to distinguish between the superposed states. The mere possibility of obtaining information that could distinguish between overlapping states inhibits quantum interference1, 2. Here we introduce and experimentally demonstrate a quantum imaging concept based on induced coherence without induced emission3, 4. Our experiment uses two separate down-conversion nonlinear crystals (numbered NL1 and NL2), each illuminated by the same pump laser, creating one pair of photons (denoted idler and signal). If the photon pair is created in NL1, one photon (the idler) passes through the object to be imaged and is overlapped with the idler amplitude created in NL2, its source thus being undefined. Interference of the signal amplitudes coming from the two crystals then reveals the image of the object. The photons that pass through the imaged object (idler photons from NL1) are never detected, while we obtain images exclusively with the signal photons (from NL1 and NL2), which do not interact with the object. Our experiment is fundamentally different from previous quantum imaging techniques, such as interaction-free imaging5 or ghost imaging6, 7, 8, 9, because now the photons used to illuminate the object do not have to be detected at all and no coincidence detection is necessary. This enables the probe wavelength to be chosen in a range for which suitable detectors are not available. To illustrate this, we show images of objects that are either opaque or invisible to the detected photons. Our experiment is a prototype in quantum information—knowledge can be extracted by, and about, a photon that is never detected.

Reading today…

Reading today…

Vacuum-ultraviolet to infrared supercontinuum in hydrogen-filled photonic crystal fiber

Optica, Vol. 2, Issue 4, pp. 292-300 (2015)
doi: 10.1364/OPTICA.2.000292

A nice demonstration of ultra-broadband supercontinuum generation, right down into the VUV range for the first time, based around a kagomé fibre.

Reading today…

Reading today…

Role of electron-electron interference in ultrafast time-resolved imaging of electronic wavepackets

Gopal Dixit and Robin Santra

J. Chem. Phys. 138, 134311 (2013)

Also on the Arxiv

Continuing Dixit & Santra’s work on applying QED formalism to electron scattering and ionization, in particular the role of electronic wavepacket coherence and interference in fully quantum (light + matter) vs. semi-classical treatments.