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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
651

Spektroskopie fotoionizačního přechodu neutrálního atomu vápníku emitovaného laserovou ablací / Spectroscopy of a photoionization transition of neutral Calcium atom emitted by laser ablation

Grim, Jakub January 2020 (has links)
Pulsed laser ablation, calcium, absorption spectrum, spectral line
652

Mixtures of ultracold gases: Fermi sea and Bose-Einstein condensate of Lithium isotopes

Schreck, Florian 21 January 2002 (has links) (PDF)
Cette thèse décrit l'étude des gaz de fermions $^6$Li et de bosons<br />$^7$Li dans le régime quantique à très basse température. Le<br />refroidissement est obtenu par évaporation du $^7$Li dans un piège<br />magnétique très confinant. Puisque le refroidissement évaporatif<br />d'un gaz de fermion polarisé est quasiment impossible, le $^6$Li<br />est refroidi sympathiquement par contact thermique avec le $^7$Li.<br />Dans une première série d'expériences, les propriétés des gaz<br />quantiques dans les états hyperfins les plus élevés, piégés<br />magnétiquement, sont étudiées. Un gaz de $10^5$ fermions a une<br />température de 0.25(5) fois la température de Fermi ($T_F$) est<br />obtenu. L'instabilité du condensat pour plus de 300 atomes<br />condensés, à cause des interactions attractives, limite la<br />dégénérescence que l'on peut atteindre. Pour s'affranchir de cette<br />limite, une autre série d'expérience est menée dans les états<br />hyperfins bas, piégeable magnétiquement, où les interactions entre<br />bosons sont faiblement répulsives. Les collisions<br />inter-isotopiques permettent alors la thermalisation du mélange.<br />Le mélange d'un condensat de Bose-Einstein (CBE) de $^7$Li et d'un<br />mer de Fermi de $^6$Li est produit. Le condensat est quasi<br />unidimensionnel et la fraction thermique peut être négligeable. La<br />dégénérescence atteinte correspond à $T/T_C=T/T_F=0.2(1)$. La<br />température est mesurée à partir de la fraction thermique des<br />bosons qui disparaît aux plus basses températures, et limite notre<br />précision de mesure. Dans une troisième série d'expérience, les<br />bosons sont transférés dans un piège optique, et placé dans l'état<br />interne $|F=1,m_F=1\rangle$, l'état fondamental pour les bosons.<br />Une résonance de Feshbach est repérée puis exploitée pour former<br />un condensai où les interactions sont ajustables. Quand les<br />interactions effectives entre les atomes sont attractives, on<br />observe la formation d'un soliton brillant de matière. La<br />propagation de ce soliton sans dispersion sur une distance de<br />$1.1\,$mm est observée.
653

Elucidation of Unconventional Bonding in Lithium Organic Compounds / Untersuchung unkonventioneller Bindungssituationen in lithiumorganischen Verbindungen

Ott, Holger 28 April 2009 (has links)
No description available.
654

Thermodynamic and spectral properties of quantum many-particle systems / Thermodynamische und spektrale Eigenschaften quantenmechanischer Vielteilchensysteme

Fuchs, Sebastian 21 January 2011 (has links)
No description available.
655

Étude électrique et spectroscopique des décharges à barrière diélectrique à la pression atmosphérique en milieux réactifs

Guemmache, Karim 08 1900 (has links)
Le travail présenté dans le cadre de ce mémoire s’intéresse à l’étude des plasmas à la pression atmosphérique en configuration décharge à barrière diélectrique (DBD), pertinents pour le traitement de surface. Plus spécifiquement, les DBDs à l’étude sont en milieux réactifs pour le dépôt de couches minces (multi)fonctionnelles, soit en présence d’un précurseur organosilicié (HMDSO) et/ou d’un agent oxydant (N₂O). L’étude est centrée sur l’analyse de deux propriétés fondamentales du plasma : la température électronique (Tₑ) et la densité des atomes d’hélium dans un état métastable (n_He(2³S)). La première est étudiée en ayant recours à des mesures des populations des niveaux n=3 de l’hélium par spectroscopie optique d’émission, alors que la seconde l’est à partir de ces mêmes mesures couplées à des mesures électriques. La particularité de cette étude est la mise au point de nouveaux diagnostics électriques et spectroscopiques pour réaliser des mesures résolues spatialement, c'est-à-dire en fonction du temps de résidence (t_res) du mélange gazeux injecté en continu. Dans les milieux réactifs étudiés, ces nouveaux diagnostics montraient des changements dans les caractéristiques courant-tension entre l’entrée et la sortie de la décharge. Cependant, Tₑ conservait un profil homogène spatialement alors que la n_He(2³S) se montrait relativement plus faible en entrée, de par leurs interactions avec les précurseurs et les impuretés présents dans ces milieux. L’analyse des signatures optiques du HMDSO dans le volume de la décharge a aussi permis de faire des liens avec les propriétés de surface des couches réalisées en conditions similaires. Notamment, les mesures de vitesse de dépôt observées sur les couches, étant plus faibles avec l’augmentation du t_res, ont pu être liées aux émissions des fragments carbonés, plus fortes en entrée, ainsi qu’à la n_He(2³S), plus faible à cet endroit, sachant que ces derniers jouent un rôle important dans la fragmentation du précurseur HMDSO. De plus, l’analyse de rapport d’intensités d’émissions de ces fragments semble montrée une tendance similaire aux rapports atomiques O/C obtenus par mesures de spectroscopie à rayon X (XPS) sur les couches produites, mais l’interprétation de ces évolutions se veut plus complexe. / The work presented in this master’s thesis focuses on the study of atmospheric pressure plasmas in a dielectric barrier discharge (DBD) configuration, which are relevant for surface treatment. More specifically, the DBDs under study are in reactive media for the deposition of (multi)functional coatings, either in the presence of an organosilicon precursor (HMDSO) and/or an oxidizing agent (N₂O). The study focuses on the analysis of two fundamental plasma properties: the electron temperature (Tₑ) and the density of helium atoms in a metastable state (n_He(2³S)). The first is studied using measurements of the n = 3 level helium populations by optical emission spectroscopy, while the second is based on these same measurements coupled with electrical measurements. The peculiarity of this study is the development of new electrical and spectroscopic diagnoses to carry out spatially resolved measurements, that is depending on the residence time (t_res) of the gas mixture injected continuously. In the reactive media studied, these new diagnoses showed changes in the current-voltage characteristics between the entrance and the exit of the discharge. However, the Tₑ maintained a spatially homogeneous profile while the n_He(2³S) was relatively lower at entry, because of their interactions with the precursors and the impurities present in these media. The analysis of the HMDSO optical signatures in the discharge volume also made it possible to establish links with the surface properties of the coatings produced under similar conditions. In particular, the measurements of deposition rate observed on the coatings, being lower with the increase of the t_res, could be linked to the emissions of the carbonaceous fragments, stronger at the entrance, as well as to the n_He(2³S), weaker here, knowing that they play an important role in the fragmentation of the HMDSO precursor. Moreover, the analysis of emission intensity ratios of these fragments seems to show a similar trend to the O/C atomic ratios obtained by X-ray spectroscopy (XPS) measurements on the coatings produced, but the interpretation of these evolutions is more complex.
656

Equilibrium and out-of-equilibrium physics of Bose gases at finite temperature

Wolswijk, Louise 24 June 2022 (has links)
The physics of ultracold quantum gases has been the subject of a long-lasting and intense research activity, which started almost a century ago with purely theoretical studies and had a fluorishing experimental development after the implementation of laser and evaporative cooling techniques that led to the first realization of a Bose Einstein condensate (BEC) over 25 years ago. In recent years, a great interest in ultracold atoms has developed for their use as platforms for quantum technologies, given the high degree of control and tunability offered by ultracold atom systems. These features make ultracold atoms an ideal test bench for simulating and studying experimentally, in a controlled environment, physical phenomena analogous to those occurring in other, more complicated, or even inaccessible systems, which is the idea at the heart of quantum simulation. In the rapidly developing field of quantum technologies, it is highly important to acquire an in-depth understanding of the state of the quantum many-body system that is used, and of the processes needed to reach the desired state. The preparation of the system in a given target state often involves the crossing of second order phase transitions, bringing the system strongly out-of-equilibrium. A better understanding of the out-of-equilibrium processes occurring in the vicinity of the transition, and of the relaxation dynamics towards the final equilibrium condition, is crucial in order to produce well-controlled quantum states in an efficient way. In this thesis I present the results of the research activity that I performed during my PhD at the BEC1 laboratory of the BEC center, working on ultracold gases of 23Na atoms in an elongated harmonic trap. This work had two main goals: the accurate determination of the equilibrium properties of a Bose gas at finite temperature, by the measurement of its equation of state, and the investigation of the out-of-equilibrium dynamics occurring when a Bose Einstein condensate is prepared by cooling a thermal cloud at a finite rate across the BEC phase transition.To study the equilibrium physics of a trapped atomic cloud, it is crucial to be able to observe its density distribution in situ. This requires a high optical resolution to accurately obtain the density profile of the atomic distribution, from which thermodynamic quantities can then be extracted. In particular, in a partially condensed atomic cloud at finite temperature, it is challenging to resolve well also the boundaries of the BEC, where the condensate fraction rapidly drops in a narrow spatial region. This required an upgrade of the experimental apparatus in order to obtain a high enough resolution. I designed, tested and implemented in the experimental setup new imaging systems for all main directions of view. Particular attention was paid for the vertical imaging system, which was designed to image the condensates in trap with a resolution below 2 μm, with about a factor 4 improvement compared to the previous setup. The implementation of the new imaging systems involved a partial rebuilding of the experimental apparatus used for cooling the atoms. This created the occasion for an optimization of the whole system to obtain more stable working conditions. Concurrently I also realized and included in the experiment an optical setup for the use of a Digital Micromirror Device (DMD) to project time-dependent arbitrary light patterns on the atoms, creating optical potentials that can be controlled at will. The use of this device opens up exciting future scenarios where it will be possible to locally modify the trapping potential and to create well-controlled barriers moving through the atomic cloud. Another challenge in imaging the density distribution in situ is determined by the fact that the maximum optical density (OD) of the BEC, in the trap center, exceeds the low OD of the thermal tails by several orders of magnitude. In order to obtain an accurate image of the whole density profile, we developed a minimally destructive, multi-shot imaging technique, based on the partial transfer of a fraction of atoms to an auxiliary state, which is then probed. Taking multiple images at different extraction fractions, we are able to reconstruct the whole density profile of the atomic cloud avoiding saturation and maintaining a good signal to noise ratio. This technique, together with the improvements in the imaging resolution, has allowed us to accurately obtain the optical density profile of the Bose gas in trap, from which the 3D density profile was then calculated applying an inverse Abel transform, taking advantage of the symmetry of the trap. From images of the same cloud after a time-of-flight expansion, we measured the temperature of the gas. From these quantities we could find the pressure as a function of the density and temperature, determining the canonical equation of state of the weakly interacting Bose gas in equilibrium at finite temperature. These measurements also allowed us to clearly observe the non-monotonic temperature behavior of the chemical potential near the critical point for the phase transition, a feature that characterizes also other superfluid systems, but that had never been observed before in weakly interacting Bose gases. The second part of this thesis work is devoted to the study of the dynamical processes that occur during the formation of the BEC order parameter within a thermal cloud. The cooling at finite rate across the Bose-Einstein condensation transition brings the system in a strongly out-of-equilibrium state, which is worth investigating, together with the subsequent relaxation towards an equilibrium state. This is of interest also in view of achieving a better understanding of second order phase transitions in general, since such phenomena are ubiquitous in nature and relevant also in other platforms for quantum technologies. A milestone result in the study of second order phase transitions is given by the Kibble-Zurek mechanism, which provides a simple model capturing important aspects of the evolution of a system that crosses a second-order phase transition at finite rate. It is based on the principle that in an extended system the symmetry breaking associated with a continuous phase transition can take place only locally. This causes the formation of causally disconnected domains of the order parameter, at the boundaries of which topological defects can form, whose number and size scale with the rate at which the transition is crossed, following a universal power law. It was originally developed in the context of cosmology, but was later successfully tested in a variety of systems, including superfluid helium, superconductors, trapped ions and ultracold atoms. The BEC phase transition represents in this context a paradigmatic test-bench, given the high degree of control at which this second-order phase transition can be crossed by means of cooling ramps at different rates. Already early experiments investigated the formation of the BEC order parameter within a thermal cloud, after quasi-instantaneous temperature quenches or very slow evaporative cooling. In the framework of directly testing the Kibble-Zurek mechanism, further experiments were performed, both in 2D and 3D systems, focusing on the emergence of coherence and on the statistics of the spontaneously generated topological defects as a function of the cooling rate. The Kibble-Zurek mechanism, however, does not fully describe the out-of-equilibrium dynamics of the system at the transition, nor the post-quench interaction mechanisms between domains that lead to coarse-graining. Most theoretical models are based on a direct linear variation of a single control parameter, e.g. the temperature, across the transition. In real experiments, the cooling process is controlled by the tuning of other experimental parameters and a global temperature might not even be well defined, in a thermodynamic sense, during the whole process. Moreover, the temperature variation is usually accompanied by the variation of other quantities, such as the number of atoms and the collisional rate, making it difficult to accurately describe the system and predict the post-quench properties. Recent works included effects going beyond the Kibble-Zurek mechanism, such as the inhomogeneity introduced by the trapping potential, the role of atom number losses, and the saturation of the number of defects for high cooling rates. These works motivate further studies, in particular of the dynamics taking place at early times, close to the crossing of the critical point. The aim of the work presented in this thesis is to further investigate the timescales associated to the formation and evolution of the BEC order parameter and its spatial fluctuations, as a function of the rate at which the transition point is crossed. We performed experiments producing BECs by means of cooling protocols that are commonly used in cold-atom laboratories, involving evaporative cooling in a magnetic trap. We explored a wide range of cooling rates across the transition and found a universal scaling for the growth of the BEC order parameter with the cooling rate and a finite delay in its formation. The latter was already observed in earlier works, but for a much more limited range of cooling rates. The evolution of the fluctuations of the order parameter was also investigated, with an analysis of the timescale of their decay during the relaxation of the system, from an initial strongly out-of-equilibrium condition to a final equilibrium state. This thesis is structured as follows: The first chapter presents the theoretical background, starting with a brief introduction to the concept of Bose Einstein condensation and a presentation of different models describing the thermodynamics of an equilibrium Bose gas. The second part of this chapter then deals with the out-of-equilibrium dynamics that is inevitably involved in the crossing of a second-order phase transition such as the one for Bose-Einstein condensation. The Kibble-Zurek mechanism is briefly reviewed and beyond KZ effects are pointed out, motivating a more detailed investigation of the timescales involved in the BEC formation. In the second chapter, I describe the experimental apparatus that we use to cool and confine the atoms. Particular detail is dedicated to the parts that have been upgraded during my PhD, such as the imaging system. In the third chapter I show our experimental results on the measurement of the equation of state of the weakly interacting uniform Bose gas at finite temperature. In the fourth chapter I present our results on the out-of-equilibrium dynamics in the formation of the condensate order parameter and its spatial fluctuations, as a function of different cooling rates.
657

Residual density validation and the structure of Labyrinthopeptin A2 / Residualdichtevalidierung und die Struktur von Labyrinthopeptin A2

Meindl, Katharina Anna Christina 30 October 2008 (has links)
No description available.

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