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1.
Nature ; 569(7758): 692-697, 2019 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31092923

RESUMEN

It has long been recognized that atomic emission of radiation is not an immutable property of an atom, but is instead dependent on the electromagnetic environment1 and, in the case of ensembles, also on the collective interactions between the atoms2-6. In an open radiative environment, the hallmark of collective interactions is enhanced spontaneous emission-super-radiance2-with non-dissipative dynamics largely obscured by rapid atomic decay7. Here we observe the dynamical exchange of excitations between a single artificial atom and an entangled collective state of an atomic array9 through the precise positioning of artificial atoms realized as superconducting qubits8 along a one-dimensional waveguide. This collective state is dark, trapping radiation and creating a cavity-like system with artificial atoms acting as resonant mirrors in the otherwise open waveguide. The emergent atom-cavity system is shown to have a large interaction-to-dissipation ratio (cooperativity exceeding 100), reaching the regime of strong coupling, in which coherent interactions dominate dissipative and decoherence effects. Achieving strong coupling with interacting qubits in an open waveguide provides a means of synthesizing multi-photon dark states with high efficiency and paves the way for exploiting correlated dissipation and decoherence-free subspaces of quantum emitter arrays at the many-body level10-13.

2.
Phys Rev E ; 105(6-1): 064503, 2022 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35854610

RESUMEN

Dynamic instability-the growth, catastrophe, and shrinkage of quasi-one-dimensional filaments-has been observed in multiple biopolymers. Scientists have long understood the catastrophic cessation of growth and subsequent depolymerization as arising from the interplay of hydrolysis and polymerization at the tip of the polymer. Here we show that for a broad class of catastrophe models, the expected catastrophe time distribution is exponential. We show that the distribution shape is insensitive to noise, but that depletion of monomers from a finite pool can dramatically change the distribution shape by reducing the polymerization rate. We derive a form for this finite-pool catastrophe time distribution and show that finite-pool effects can be important even when the depletion of monomers does not greatly alter the polymerization rate.

3.
Phys Rev E ; 104(1-1): 014406, 2021 Jul.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34412293

RESUMEN

Scientists have observed and studied diffusive waves in contexts as disparate as population genetics and cell signaling. Often, these waves are propagated by discrete entities or agents, such as individual cells in the case of cell signaling. For a broad class of diffusive waves, we characterize the transition between the collective propagation of diffusive waves, in which the wave speed is well described by continuum theory, and the propagation of diffusive waves by individual agents. We show that this transition depends heavily on the dimensionality of the system in which the wave propagates and that disordered systems yield dynamics largely consistent with lattice systems. In some system dimensionalities, the intuition that closely packed sources more accurately mimic a continuum can be grossly violated.

4.
Elife ; 92020 12 04.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33275097

RESUMEN

In biological contexts as diverse as development, apoptosis, and synthetic microbial consortia, collections of cells or subcellular components have been shown to overcome the slow signaling speed of simple diffusion by utilizing diffusive relays, in which the presence of one type of diffusible signaling molecule triggers participation in the emission of the same type of molecule. This collective effect gives rise to fast-traveling diffusive waves. Here, in the context of cell signaling, we show that system dimensionality - the shape of the extracellular medium and the distribution of cells within it - can dramatically affect the wave dynamics, but that these dynamics are insensitive to details of cellular activation. As an example, we show that neutrophil swarming experiments exhibit dynamical signatures consistent with the proposed signaling motif. We further show that cell signaling relays generate much steeper concentration profiles than does simple diffusion, which may facilitate neutrophil chemotaxis.


Asunto(s)
Comunicación Celular/fisiología , Modelos Biológicos , Modelos Teóricos , Transducción de Señal/fisiología , Animales , Humanos
5.
Nat Nanotechnol ; 14(4): 334-339, 2019 04.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30778214

RESUMEN

Recent technical developments in the fields of quantum electromechanics and optomechanics have spawned nanoscale mechanical transducers with the sensitivity to measure mechanical displacements at the femtometre scale and the ability to convert electromagnetic signals at the single photon level. A key challenge in this field is obtaining strong coupling between motion and electromagnetic fields without adding additional decoherence. Here we present an electromechanical transducer that integrates a high-frequency (0.42 GHz) hypersonic phononic crystal with a superconducting microwave circuit. The use of a phononic bandgap crystal enables quantum-level transduction of hypersonic mechanical motion and concurrently eliminates decoherence caused by acoustic radiation. Devices with hypersonic mechanical frequencies provide a natural pathway for integration with Josephson junction quantum circuits, a leading quantum computing technology, and nanophotonic systems capable of optical networking and distributing quantum information.

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