Abstracts_Advanced_Workshop_Sibiu_2009
... In a search for future spintronic and photonic devices, quantum dots doped with magnetic atoms are very promising candidates since they offer the opportunity to utilize their electronic, magnetic and optical characteristics simultaneously. It is however unclear how efficient InAs Quantum Dots can be ...
... In a search for future spintronic and photonic devices, quantum dots doped with magnetic atoms are very promising candidates since they offer the opportunity to utilize their electronic, magnetic and optical characteristics simultaneously. It is however unclear how efficient InAs Quantum Dots can be ...
Dipole blockade through Rydberg Forster resonance energy
... properties of room temperature atoms, in particular, large cross sections and long interaction times [1]. These properties have stimulated great interest in the possibility of controlling the strong long-range interactions between cold atoms [2, 3, 4], which could be particularly exciting for quantu ...
... properties of room temperature atoms, in particular, large cross sections and long interaction times [1]. These properties have stimulated great interest in the possibility of controlling the strong long-range interactions between cold atoms [2, 3, 4], which could be particularly exciting for quantu ...
diplomarbeit-thomas - Ultracold Quantum Gases Group
... made this regime impossible to access experimentally for a long time. The first success was the discovery of the superfluidity of 4 He below a temperature of 2.17 K, which can be explained by a model in which the superfluid is partly Bose-condensed. Yet the interactions in the liquid phase are so st ...
... made this regime impossible to access experimentally for a long time. The first success was the discovery of the superfluidity of 4 He below a temperature of 2.17 K, which can be explained by a model in which the superfluid is partly Bose-condensed. Yet the interactions in the liquid phase are so st ...
Concepts of Modern Physics
... 1900, for instance, and when I was learning modern physics most of its founders, including Einstein, were still alive; I even had the privilege of meeting a number of them, including Heisenberg, Pauli, and Dirac. Few aspects of contemporary science—indeed, of contemporary life—are unaffected by the ...
... 1900, for instance, and when I was learning modern physics most of its founders, including Einstein, were still alive; I even had the privilege of meeting a number of them, including Heisenberg, Pauli, and Dirac. Few aspects of contemporary science—indeed, of contemporary life—are unaffected by the ...
ABSTRACT CONSTRUCTION OF APPARATUS AND FIRST EXPERIMENTS INVESTIGATING DYNAMICS OF BOSE-EINSTEIN CONDENSATES
... A comprehensive review of the history and theory of Bose-Einstein condensation (BEC) is given in [48, 12]. BEC was predicted in 1925 by Albert Einstein using the statistics of photons developed by Satyendra Bose and extending it to atoms. In the decades to follow, London suggested the existence of B ...
... A comprehensive review of the history and theory of Bose-Einstein condensation (BEC) is given in [48, 12]. BEC was predicted in 1925 by Albert Einstein using the statistics of photons developed by Satyendra Bose and extending it to atoms. In the decades to follow, London suggested the existence of B ...
14th International Conference on Condensed Matter Nuclear Science Cold Fusion (ICCF-14)
... and then a plasma of increasing temperature, when it is near fully collapsed. And, the jet of material is like a beam impacting the surface of the foil. So, cavitation loading spans at least two of the major classes of loading, plasma and beam, both of which involve higher energies per particle than ...
... and then a plasma of increasing temperature, when it is near fully collapsed. And, the jet of material is like a beam impacting the surface of the foil. So, cavitation loading spans at least two of the major classes of loading, plasma and beam, both of which involve higher energies per particle than ...
experimental atomic physics
... "range: radio waves, heat rays, visible and ultra-violet light. X-rays, 7 rays emitted by radioactive substances, and possibly also cosmic rays. The knowledge gained from the investigation of visible light has formed the basis for our interpretation of the many diverse phenomena exhibited by the oth ...
... "range: radio waves, heat rays, visible and ultra-violet light. X-rays, 7 rays emitted by radioactive substances, and possibly also cosmic rays. The knowledge gained from the investigation of visible light has formed the basis for our interpretation of the many diverse phenomena exhibited by the oth ...
Eternal inflation and its implications
... big bang region is shown in grey and labelled ‘Universe’. Meanwhile, however, the space has expanded so much that each of the two remaining regions of false vacuum is the same size as the starting region. Thus, if we follow the region for another time interval of the same duration, each of these reg ...
... big bang region is shown in grey and labelled ‘Universe’. Meanwhile, however, the space has expanded so much that each of the two remaining regions of false vacuum is the same size as the starting region. Thus, if we follow the region for another time interval of the same duration, each of these reg ...
ABSTRACT BEAM HALO CREATION AND PROPAGATION IN THE UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND ELECTRON RING
... For surely the atoms did not hold council, assigning order to each, flexing their keen minds with questions of place and motion and who goes where. But shuffled and jumbled in many ways, in the course of endless time they are buffeted, driven along, chancing upon all motions, combinations. At last ...
... For surely the atoms did not hold council, assigning order to each, flexing their keen minds with questions of place and motion and who goes where. But shuffled and jumbled in many ways, in the course of endless time they are buffeted, driven along, chancing upon all motions, combinations. At last ...
Evaluation of Silicon sensors for the ATLAS Silicon Tracker, and
... 11.5 The convention on the direction of motion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 161 11.6 The linear fit in the sxy − Z plane . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 165 11.7 The reconstruction of sxy in the case R > 0 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 167 11.7.1 The reconstruction of the branches . . . . . ...
... 11.5 The convention on the direction of motion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 161 11.6 The linear fit in the sxy − Z plane . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 165 11.7 The reconstruction of sxy in the case R > 0 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 167 11.7.1 The reconstruction of the branches . . . . . ...
Consciousness-Based Education
... further. He has asserted that mind and matter have a common source, and that this source is pure consciousness. Consciousness in its pure, silent state is identical with the most fundamental level of nature’s functioning, the Unified Field of Natural Law that has been identified and described by qua ...
... further. He has asserted that mind and matter have a common source, and that this source is pure consciousness. Consciousness in its pure, silent state is identical with the most fundamental level of nature’s functioning, the Unified Field of Natural Law that has been identified and described by qua ...
Answers to Ch. 32 Packet
... b. the same sign. c. charges that can not be determined. How many different kinds of force would act on a proton placed in both an electric field and a gravitational field? a. one. b. none. c. two. The SI unit of charge is the a. ohm. b. joule. c. coulomb. d. ampere. e. newton. Particle A has twice ...
... b. the same sign. c. charges that can not be determined. How many different kinds of force would act on a proton placed in both an electric field and a gravitational field? a. one. b. none. c. two. The SI unit of charge is the a. ohm. b. joule. c. coulomb. d. ampere. e. newton. Particle A has twice ...
Static Electricity Name:
... a. both balloons are charged with the same type of charge b. both balloons are charged with the opposite type of charge c. both balloons are charged - either with the same type or opposite type of charge d. only one of the balloons is charged; the other is neutral e. at least one of the balloons is ...
... a. both balloons are charged with the same type of charge b. both balloons are charged with the opposite type of charge c. both balloons are charged - either with the same type or opposite type of charge d. only one of the balloons is charged; the other is neutral e. at least one of the balloons is ...
PENELOPE A Code System for Monte Carlo Simulation of Electron
... co-operation, the scientific, technological and legal bases required for a safe, environmentally friendly and economical use of nuclear energy for peaceful purposes, as well as − to provide authoritative assessments and to forge common understandings on key issues, as input to government decisions o ...
... co-operation, the scientific, technological and legal bases required for a safe, environmentally friendly and economical use of nuclear energy for peaceful purposes, as well as − to provide authoritative assessments and to forge common understandings on key issues, as input to government decisions o ...
Solid State NMR
... that is, the Zeeman interaction and other external magnetic fields are much greater than internal NMR interactions. Correspondingly, these internal interactions can be treated as perturbations on the Zeeman hamiltonian. ...
... that is, the Zeeman interaction and other external magnetic fields are much greater than internal NMR interactions. Correspondingly, these internal interactions can be treated as perturbations on the Zeeman hamiltonian. ...
G. Hall
... To explain the operation of a p-n diode it is usual to imagine the two sides of the junction originally isolated, and then brought into intimate contact. Thermal equilibrium is established as equal numbers of highly mobile electrons and holes, from the ntype and the p-type material, combine. A poten ...
... To explain the operation of a p-n diode it is usual to imagine the two sides of the junction originally isolated, and then brought into intimate contact. Thermal equilibrium is established as equal numbers of highly mobile electrons and holes, from the ntype and the p-type material, combine. A poten ...
I. Intrinsic and extrinsic properties
... parents not had at least one child other than yourself. You may now lack the property of being an aunt (or uncle), but you will acquire that property if you have a sibling who becomes a parent. Had individuals never formed The University of Alabama, you would not now have the property of being a stu ...
... parents not had at least one child other than yourself. You may now lack the property of being an aunt (or uncle), but you will acquire that property if you have a sibling who becomes a parent. Had individuals never formed The University of Alabama, you would not now have the property of being a stu ...
Photon and Graviton Mass Limits
... Closely related to the above is a third feature, connectivity. If many closely neighboring subjects are described by connecting theoretical concepts, then the theoretical structure acquires a robustness which makes it increasingly hard – though certainly never impossible – to overturn. The latter tw ...
... Closely related to the above is a third feature, connectivity. If many closely neighboring subjects are described by connecting theoretical concepts, then the theoretical structure acquires a robustness which makes it increasingly hard – though certainly never impossible – to overturn. The latter tw ...
Quantum Mechanics Made Simple: Lecture Notes
... The development of quantum mechanicsis a great intellectual achievement, but at the same time, it is bizarre. The reason is that quantum mechanics is quite different from classical physics. The development of quantum mechanics is likened to watching two players having a game of chess, but the watche ...
... The development of quantum mechanicsis a great intellectual achievement, but at the same time, it is bizarre. The reason is that quantum mechanics is quite different from classical physics. The development of quantum mechanics is likened to watching two players having a game of chess, but the watche ...
Prologue - LandSurvival.com
... Off the coast of the Japanese island of Yonaguni, a pyramid-like, obviously artificial megalithic structure has been found submerged under the sea in an area that could not have been above water for at least 12,000 years. And in 2001, Paulina Zelinsky and Paul Weinzweig of Advanced Digital Communic ...
... Off the coast of the Japanese island of Yonaguni, a pyramid-like, obviously artificial megalithic structure has been found submerged under the sea in an area that could not have been above water for at least 12,000 years. And in 2001, Paulina Zelinsky and Paul Weinzweig of Advanced Digital Communic ...
History of subatomic physics
The idea that matter consists of smaller particles and that there exists a limited number of sorts of primary, smallest particles in nature has existed in natural philosophy since time immemorial. Such ideas gained physical credibility beginning in the 19th century, but the concept of ""elementary particle"" underwent some changes in its meaning: notably, modern physics no longer deems elementary particles indestructible. Even elementary particles can decay or collide destructively; they can cease to exist and create (other) particles in result.Increasingly small particles have been discovered and researched: they include molecules, which are constructed of atoms, that in turn consist of subatomic particles, namely atomic nuclei and electrons. Many more types of subatomic particles have been found. Most such particles (but not electrons) were eventually found to be composed of even smaller particles such as quarks. Particle physics studies these smallest particles and their behaviour under high energies, whereas nuclear physics studies atomic nuclei and their (immediate) constituents: protons and neutrons.