Optical atomic clocks are poised to redefine the Système International (SI) second, thanks to stability and accuracy more than 100 times better than the current microwave atomic clock standard. However, the best optical clocks have not seen their performance transferred to the electronic domain, where radar, navigation, communications, and fundamental research rely on less stable microwave sources. By comparing two independent optical-to-electronic signal generators, we demonstrate a 10-gigahertz microwave signal with phase that exactly tracks that of the optical clock phase from which it is derived, yielding an absolute fractional frequency instability of 1 × 10−18 in the electronic domain. Such faithful reproduction of the optical clock phase expands the opportunities for optical clocks both technologically and scientifically for time dissemination, navigation, and long-baseline interferometric imaging.
High-speed measurement confronts the extreme speed limit when the signal becomes comparable to the noise level. In the context of broadband mid-infrared spectroscopy, state-of-the-art ultrafast Fourier-transform infrared spectrometers, in particular dual-comb spectrometers, have improved the measurement rate up to a few MSpectra s−1, which is limited by the signal-to-noise ratio. Time-stretch infrared spectroscopy, an emerging ultrafast frequency-swept mid-infrared spectroscopy technique, has shown a record-high rate of 80 MSpectra s−1 with an intrinsically higher signal-to-noise ratio than Fourier-transform spectroscopy by more than the square-root of the number of spectral elements. However, it can measure no more than ~30 spectral elements with a low resolution of several cm−1. Here, we significantly increase the measurable number of spectral elements to more than 1000 by incorporating a nonlinear upconversion process. The one-to-one mapping of a broadband spectrum from the mid-infrared to the near-infrared telecommunication region enables low-loss time-stretching with a single-mode optical fiber and low-noise signal detection with a high-bandwidth photoreceiver. We demonstrate high-resolution mid-infrared spectroscopy of gas-phase methane molecules with a high resolution of 0.017 cm−1. This unprecedentedly high-speed vibrational spectroscopy technique would satisfy various unmet needs in experimental molecular science, e.g., measuring ultrafast dynamics of irreversible phenomena, statistically analyzing a large amount of heterogeneous spectral data, or taking broadband hyperspectral images at a high frame rate.
One of the largest-scale unstructured Large Eddy Simulation (LES) of flow around a full-scale road vehicle is conducted on the Earth Simulator in Japan. The main objective of our study is to look into the validity of LES for the assessment of vehicle aerodynamics, especially in the context of its possibility for unsteady or transient aerodynamic forces. Firstly, the aerodynamic LES proposed is quantitatively validated on the ASMO simplified model by comparing the mean pressure distributions on the vehicle surface with those obtained by a conventional Reynolds-Averaged Navier-Stokes simulation (RANS) or a wind tunnel measurement. Then, the method is applied to the full-scale vehicle with complicated geometry to qualitatively investigate the capability of capturing organized flow structures around the vehicle. Finally, unsteady aerodynamic forces acting on the vehicle in transient yawing-angle change are estimated and relationship between the flow structures and the transient aerodynamic forces is mentioned. As a result, it is demonstrated that LES will be a powerful tool for the vehicle aerodynamic assessment in the foreseeable future, because it can provide precious aerodynamic data which conventional wind tunnel tests or RANS simulations are difficult to provide.
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