PREPARING ARBITRARY SUPERPOSITION STATES WITH MINIMUM NUMBER OF LASER PULSES: THE CARP METHOD

Author(s):  
BO Y. CHANG ◽  
IGNACIO R. SOLÁ ◽  
JESÚS SANTAMARÍA ◽  
VLADIMIR S. MALINOVSKY
Symmetry ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (2) ◽  
pp. 205
Author(s):  
Dietrich Haase ◽  
Gunter Hermann ◽  
Jörn Manz ◽  
Vincent Pohl ◽  
Jean Christophe Tremblay

Quantum simulations of the electron dynamics of oriented benzene and Mg-porphyrin driven by short (<10 fs) laser pulses yield electron symmetry breaking during attosecond charge migration. Nuclear motions are negligible on this time domain, i.e., the point group symmetries G = D6h and D4h of the nuclear scaffolds are conserved. At the same time, the symmetries of the one-electron densities are broken, however, to specific subgroups of G for the excited superposition states. These subgroups depend on the polarization and on the electric fields of the laser pulses. They can be determined either by inspection of the symmetry elements of the one-electron density which represents charge migration after the laser pulse, or by a new and more efficient group-theoretical approach. The results agree perfectly with each other. They suggest laser control of symmetry breaking. The choice of the target subgroup is restricted, however, by a new theorem, i.e., it must contain the symmetry group of the time-dependent electronic Hamiltonian of the oriented molecule interacting with the laser pulse(s). This theorem can also be applied to confirm or to falsify complementary suggestions of electron symmetry breaking by laser pulses.


2021 ◽  
Vol 36 (Supplement_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
H K Yelke ◽  
Y. Kumtepe Colakoglu ◽  
B Yuksel ◽  
M Cetinkaya ◽  
S Kahraman

Abstract Study question Does laser use during trophectoderm biopsy affect biopsy results on prehatching embryos with regard to mosaicism ? Summary answer According to our findings laser usage during trophectoderm biopsy increases mosaic results on next generation sequencing (NGS) irrespective of embryo quality. What is known already Chromosomal mosaicism, which is a result of mitotic errors after fertilization, is defined as the presence of karyotypically distinct cell lines within an embryo. The introduction of NGS made it possible to detect chromosomal mosaicism at levels as low as 20%. The incidence of mosaicism is highly variable between clinics which reported the incidences between 4-32%. Apart from the biological reasons, there are also various technical factors that may impact the incidence of mosaicism. One of the most emphasized factors is the trophoectoderm biopsy technique. Laser usage and number of laser pulses may cause excessive heat during the procedure Study design, size, duration The mosaicism ratio in embryos in which trophectoderm biopsy was performed with or without laser, between January 2017 December 2020 in Istanbul Memorial Hospital (IMH) were examined retrospectively. A total of 13002 embryos were analyzed. A subgroup analysis was also performed regarding mosaicism ratios in different embryo qualities. Blastocysts were classified according to Gardner’s classification and classified as follows: top quality-TQ (4AA,5AA,6AA), good quality-GQ (3AA, 4,5,6AB,BA) and moderate quality-MQ (3,4,5 BB). Participants/materials, setting, methods The biopsy samples of the cases who had PGT-A in IMH between 2017-2020 were evaluated by NGS method. This method enables the identification of embryos with 20% to 80% mosaicism. The study assessed whether there was an increase in the embryos with mosaic results due to the use of laser during biopsy. The effects of laser use among the TQ (4AA,5AA,6AA), GQ (3AA, 4,5,6AB,BA) and MQ (3,4,5 BB) groups according to Garder classification were analyzed. Main results and the role of chance Trophectoderm biopsy was applied on 13002 embryos within the specified period. During biopsy in 5088 embryos laser was used and in 7843 embryos laser was not used, and biopsy was performed mechanically (flicking method). After observing the biopsy results, 945/5088 (18.5%) of the laser applied embryos; and 1087/7914 (13.7%) of laser not applied embryos were defined as mosaic(p &lt; 0.0001). When mosaicism rates were examined according to embryo qualities, the rate of mosaicism was 19.3%(469/2430), 18.2%(290/1591) and 13.2%( 380/2875), 13.5 (426/3141) respectively in embryos with and without laser in TQ and GQ groups. A statistically high level of significance (p &lt; 0.0001) was observed between the embryos evaluated as top quality and good quality before biopsy. Regarding the evaluation in the moderate group embryos, although the mosaicism rates tended to increase on the laser applied group side 40/248(16.1%), no statistical difference was observed when compared to non-laser group 103/670(15,4%). (P &gt; 0.05) Limitations, reasons for caution The retrospective nature of the data is the main limitation of the study. On the other hand, the large number of NGS based PGT-A tested TQ and GQ embryos from a single center and resuts from single laboratory. However, further studies are required to corroborate our findings. Wider implications of the findings Laser dependent heat effect may increase mosaicism. To reduce the cell damage, teasing of cells should be avoided and a minimum number of laser pulses should be used in order to avoid excessive heat and contact points should be preferably confined to cell junctions Trial registration number None


2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Venzke ◽  
A. Becker ◽  
A. Jaron-Becker

Abstract Progress in ultrafast science allows for probing quantum superposition states with ultrashort laser pulses in the new regime where several linear and nonlinear ionization pathways compete. Interferences of pathways can be observed in the photoelectron angular distribution and in the past they have been analyzed for atoms and molecules in a single quantum state via anisotropy and asymmetry parameters. Those conventional parameters, however, do not provide comprehensive tools for probing superposition states in the emerging research area of bright and ultrashort light sources, such as free-electron lasers and high-order harmonic generation. We propose a new set of generalized asymmetry parameters which are sensitive to interference effects in the photoionization and the interplay of competing pathways as the laser pulse duration is shortened and the laser intensity is increased. The relevance of the parameters is demonstrated using results of state-of-the-art numerical solutions of the time-dependent Schrödinger equation for ionization of helium atom and neon atom.


2009 ◽  
Vol 26 (10) ◽  
pp. 1912 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiao-Tao Xie ◽  
Mihai Macovei ◽  
Martin Kiffner ◽  
Christoph H. Keitel

Author(s):  
D. C. Joy ◽  
R. D. Bunn

The information available from an SEM image is limited both by the inherent signal to noise ratio that characterizes the image and as a result of the transformations that it may undergo as it is passed through the amplifying circuits of the instrument. In applications such as Critical Dimension Metrology it is necessary to be able to quantify these limitations in order to be able to assess the likely precision of any measurement made with the microscope.The information capacity of an SEM signal, defined as the minimum number of bits needed to encode the output signal, depends on the signal to noise ratio of the image - which in turn depends on the probe size and source brightness and acquisition time per pixel - and on the efficiency of the specimen in producing the signal that is being observed. A detailed analysis of the secondary electron case shows that the information capacity C (bits/pixel) of the SEM signal channel could be written as :


2020 ◽  
Vol 63 (6) ◽  
pp. 1947-1957
Author(s):  
Alexandra Hollo ◽  
Johanna L. Staubitz ◽  
Jason C. Chow

Purpose Although sampling teachers' child-directed speech in school settings is needed to understand the influence of linguistic input on child outcomes, empirical guidance for measurement procedures needed to obtain representative samples is lacking. To optimize resources needed to transcribe, code, and analyze classroom samples, this exploratory study assessed the minimum number and duration of samples needed for a reliable analysis of conventional and researcher-developed measures of teacher talk in elementary classrooms. Method This study applied fully crossed, Person (teacher) × Session (samples obtained on 3 separate occasions) generalizability studies to analyze an extant data set of three 10-min language samples provided by 28 general and special education teachers recorded during large-group instruction across the school year. Subsequently, a series of decision studies estimated of the number and duration of sessions needed to obtain the criterion g coefficient ( g > .70). Results The most stable variables were total number of words and mazes, requiring only a single 10-min sample, two 6-min samples, or three 3-min samples to reach criterion. No measured variables related to content or complexity were adequately stable regardless of number and duration of samples. Conclusions Generalizability studies confirmed that a large proportion of variance was attributable to individuals rather than the sampling occasion when analyzing the amount and fluency of spontaneous teacher talk. In general, conventionally reported outcomes were more stable than researcher-developed codes, which suggests some categories of teacher talk are more context dependent than others and thus require more intensive data collection to measure reliably.


2002 ◽  
Vol 12 (3) ◽  
pp. 201-206 ◽  
Author(s):  
Janina Marciak-Kozłowska ◽  
Mirosław Kozłowski
Keyword(s):  

2001 ◽  
Vol 11 (PR2) ◽  
pp. Pr2-39-Pr2-42 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Kado ◽  
T. Kawachi ◽  
N. Hasegawa ◽  
M. Tanaka ◽  
K. Sukegawa ◽  
...  

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document