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1.
Nat Commun ; 11(1): 2126, 2020 05 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32358532

ABSTRACT

Many inland waters exhibit complete or partial desiccation, or have vanished due to global change, exposing sediments to the atmosphere. Yet, data on carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions from these sediments are too scarce to upscale emissions for global estimates or to understand their fundamental drivers. Here, we present the results of a global survey covering 196 dry inland waters across diverse ecosystem types and climate zones. We show that their CO2 emissions share fundamental drivers and constitute a substantial fraction of the carbon cycled by inland waters. CO2 emissions were consistent across ecosystem types and climate zones, with local characteristics explaining much of the variability. Accounting for such emissions increases global estimates of carbon emissions from inland waters by 6% (~0.12 Pg C y-1). Our results indicate that emissions from dry inland waters represent a significant and likely increasing component of the inland waters carbon cycle.

2.
Phys Rev Lett ; 113(17): 170403, 2014 Oct 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25379905

ABSTRACT

This Letter comprises an experimental and theoretical investigation of the time evolution of a Fermi gas following fast and slow quenches of a one-dimensional optical double-well superlattice potential. We investigate both the local tunneling in the connected double wells and the global dynamics towards a steady state, i.e., a time-independent state. The local observables in the steady state resemble those of a thermal equilibrium state, whereas the global properties indicate a strong nonequilibrium situation.

3.
Phys Rev Lett ; 109(13): 130403, 2012 Sep 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23030071

ABSTRACT

We realize and study an attractively interacting two-dimensional Fermi liquid. Using momentum-resolved photoemission spectroscopy, we measure the self-energy, determine the contact parameter of the short-range interaction potential, and find their dependence on the interaction strength. We successfully compare the measurements to a theoretical analysis, properly taking into account the finite temperature, harmonic trap, and the averaging over several two-dimensional gases with different peak densities.

4.
Phys Rev Lett ; 108(18): 183602, 2012 May 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22681075

ABSTRACT

We study theoretically and experimentally the quantification of non-gaussian distributions via nondestructive measurements. Using the theory of cumulants, their unbiased estimators, and the uncertainties of these estimators, we describe a quantification which is simultaneously efficient, unbiased by measurement noise, and suitable for hypothesis tests, e.g., to detect nonclassical states. The theory is applied to cold 87Rb spin ensembles prepared in non-gaussian states by optical pumping and measured by nondestructive Faraday rotation probing. We find an optimal use of measurement resources under realistic conditions, e.g., in atomic ensemble quantum memories.

5.
Phys Rev Lett ; 109(25): 253605, 2012 Dec 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23368463

ABSTRACT

We report the generation of spin squeezing and entanglement in a magnetically sensitive atomic ensemble, and entanglement-enhanced field measurements with this system. A maximal m(f) = ± 1 Raman coherence is prepared in an ensemble of 8.5 × 10(5) laser-cooled (87)Rb atoms in the f = 1 hyperfine ground state, and the collective spin is squeezed by synthesized optical quantum nondemolition measurement. This prepares a state with large spin alignment and noise below the projection-noise level in a mixed alignment-orientation variable. 3.2 dB of noise reduction is observed and 2.0 dB of squeezing by the Wineland criterion, implying both entanglement and metrological advantage. Enhanced sensitivity is demonstrated in field measurements using alignment-to-orientation conversion.

6.
Nature ; 471(7339): 486-9, 2011 Mar 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21430776

ABSTRACT

Quantum metrology aims to use entanglement and other quantum resources to improve precision measurement. An interferometer using N independent particles to measure a parameter χ can achieve at best the standard quantum limit of sensitivity, δχ ∝ N(-1/2). However, using N entangled particles and exotic states, such an interferometer can in principle achieve the Heisenberg limit, δχ ∝ N(-1). Recent theoretical work has argued that interactions among particles may be a valuable resource for quantum metrology, allowing scaling beyond the Heisenberg limit. Specifically, a k-particle interaction will produce sensitivity δχ ∝ N(-k) with appropriate entangled states and δχ ∝ N(-(k-1/2)) even without entanglement. Here we demonstrate 'super-Heisenberg' scaling of δχ ∝ N(-3/2) in a nonlinear, non-destructive measurement of the magnetization of an atomic ensemble. We use fast optical nonlinearities to generate a pairwise photon-photon interaction (corresponding to k = 2) while preserving quantum-noise-limited performance. We observe super-Heisenberg scaling over two orders of magnitude in N, limited at large numbers by higher-order nonlinear effects, in good agreement with theory. For a measurement of limited duration, super-Heisenberg scaling allows the nonlinear measurement to overtake in sensitivity a comparable linear measurement with the same number of photons. In other situations, however, higher-order nonlinearities prevent this crossover from occurring, reflecting the subtle relationship between scaling and sensitivity in nonlinear systems. Our work shows that interparticle interactions can improve sensitivity in a quantum-limited measurement, and experimentally demonstrates a new resource for quantum metrology.

7.
Phys Rev Lett ; 105(9): 093602, 2010 Aug 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20868158

ABSTRACT

Quantum nondemolition (QND) measurement of collective variables by off-resonant optical probing has the ability to create entanglement and squeezing in atomic ensembles. Until now, this technique has been applied to real or effective spin one-half systems. We show theoretically that the buildup of Raman coherence prevents the naive application of this technique to larger spin atoms, but that dynamical decoupling can be used to recover the ideal QND behavior. We experimentally demonstrate dynamical decoupling by using a two-polarization probing technique. The decoupled QND measurement achieves a sensitivity 5.7(6) dB better than the spin projection noise.

8.
Phys Rev Lett ; 104(9): 093602, 2010 Mar 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20366983

ABSTRACT

We demonstrate sub-projection-noise sensitivity of a broadband atomic magnetometer using quantum nondemolition spin measurements. A cold, dipole-trapped sample of rubidium atoms provides a long-lived spin system in a nonmagnetic environment, and is probed nondestructively by paramagnetic Faraday rotation. The calibration procedure employs as known reference state, the maximum-entropy or "thermal" spin state, and quantitative imaging-based atom counting to identify electronic, quantum, and technical noise in both the probe and spin system. The measurement achieves a sensitivity 1.6 dB (2.8 dB) better than projection-noise (thermal state quantum noise) and will enable squeezing-enhanced broadband magnetometry.

9.
Phys Rev Lett ; 95(15): 157403, 2005 Oct 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16241760

ABSTRACT

We present a comprehensive study of ultrafast relaxation properties of optical excitations in thin films of quasi-1D stacked organic materials PTCDA (3,4,9,10-perylenetetracarboxylic dianhydride) and MePTCDI (N,N'-dimethylperylene-3,4,9,10-dicarboximide) over five decades of time. Pump-probe experiments reveal excitonic intraband relaxation time constants of 65 fs for MePTCDI and 100 fs for PTCDA. The initial time-resolved luminescence anisotropy is consistent with the exciton model of Davydov-split states. The subsequent decay of the anisotropy can be explained with a thermally activated exciton hopping process. A full understanding of the pump-probe experiments calls for an explanation beyond the models presently available.

10.
Microb Ecol ; 43(1): 92-106, 2002 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11984632

ABSTRACT

Acidic volcanic waters are naturally occurring extreme habitats that are subject of worldwide geochemical research but have been little investigated with respect to their biology. To fill this gap, the microbial ecology of a volcanic acidic river (pH approximately equal to 0-1.6), Rio Agrio, and the recipient lake Caviahue in Patagonia, Argentina, was studied. Water and sediment samples were investigated for Fe(II), Fe(III), methane, bacterial abundances, biomass, and activities (oxygen consumption, iron oxidation and reduction). The extremely acidic river showed a strong gradient of microbial life with increasing values downstream and few signs of life near the source. Only sulfide-oxidizing and fermentative bacteria could be cultured from the upper part of Rio Agrio. However, in the lower part of the system, microbial biomass and oxygen penetration and consumption in the sediment were comparable to non-extreme aquatic habitats. To characterize similarities and differences of chemically similar natural and man-made acidic waters, our findings were compared to those from acidic mining lakes in Germany. In the lower part of the river and the lake, numbers of iron and sulfur bacteria and total biomass in sediments were comparable to those known from acidic mining lakes. Bacterial abundance in water samples was also very similar for both types of acidic water (around 10(5) mL(-1)). In contrast, Fe(II) oxidation and Fe(III) reduction potentials appeared to be lower despite higher biogenic oxygen consumption and higher photosynthetic activity at the sediment-water interface. Surprisingly, methanogenesis was detected in the presence of high sulfate concentrations in the profundal sediment of Lake Caviahue. In addition to supplementing microbiological knowledge on acidic volcanic waters, our study provides a new view of these extreme sites in the general context of aquatic habitats.


Subject(s)
Bacteria , Environmental Monitoring , Volcanic Eruptions , Water Microbiology , Argentina , Biomass , Euryarchaeota , Fermentation , Geologic Sediments/microbiology , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Iron/chemistry , Oxygen Consumption , Population Dynamics , Sulfur/chemistry
11.
Arch Microbiol ; 166(1): 23-31, 1996 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8661941

ABSTRACT

A new bacterial strain isolated from soil consumed nitric oxide (NO) under oxic conditions by oxidation to nitrate. Phenotypic and phylogenetic characterization of the new strain PS88 showed that it represents a previously unknown species of the genus Pseudomonas, closely related to Pseudomonas fluorescens and Pseudomonas putida. The heterotrophic, obligately aerobic strain PS88 was not able to denitrify or nitrify; however, strain PS88 oxidized NO to nitrate. NO was not reduced to nitrous oxide (N2O). Nitrogen dioxide (NO2) and nitrite (NO2-) as possible intermediates of NO oxidation to nitrate (NO3-) could not be detected. NO oxidation was inhibited under anoxic conditions and by high osmolarity, but not by nitrite. NO oxidation activity was inhibited by addition of formaldehyde, HgCl2, and antimycin, and by autoclaving or disintegrating the cells, indicating that the process was enzyme-mediated. However, the mechanism remains unclear. A stepwise oxidation at a metalloenzyme and a radical mechanism are discussed. NO oxidation in strain PS88 seems to be a detoxification or a co-oxidation mechanism, rather than an energy-yielding process.


Subject(s)
Nitric Oxide/metabolism , Pseudomonas/metabolism , Oxidation-Reduction , Phylogeny , Pseudomonas/classification
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