Optical analog computing offers high-throughput low-power-consumption operation for specialized computational tasks. Traditionally, optical analog computing in the spatial domain uses a bulky system of lenses and filters. Recent developments in metamaterials enable the miniaturization of such computing elements down to a subwavelength scale. However, the required metamaterial consists of a complex array of meta-atoms, and direct demonstration of image processing is challenging. Here, we show that the interference effects associated with surface plasmon excitations at a single metal–dielectric interface can perform spatial differentiation. And we experimentally demonstrate edge detection of an image without any Fourier lens. This work points to a simple yet powerful mechanism for optical analog computing at the nanoscale.
The evolutions of the flat FLRW universe and its linear perturbations are studied systematically in the dressed metric approach of LQC. When it is dominated by the kinetic energy of the inflaton at the quantum bounce, the evolution of the background can be divided into three different phases prior to the preheating, {\em bouncing, transition and slow-roll inflation}. During the bouncing phase, the evolution is independent of not only the initial conditions, but also the inflationary potentials. In particular, the expansion factor can be well described by the same exact solution in all the cases considered. In contrast, in the potential dominated case such a universality is lost. It is because of this universality that the linear perturbations are also independent of the inflationary models and obtained exactly. During the transition phase, the evolutions of the background and its linear perturbations are found explicitly, and then matched to the ones given in the other two phases. Hence, once the initial conditions are imposed, the linear scalar and tensor perturbations will be uniquely determined. Considering two different sets of initial conditions, one imposed during the contracting phase and the other at the bounce, we calculate the Bogoliubov coefficients and find that the two sets yield the same results and all lead to particle creations at the onset of the inflation. Due to the pre-inflationary dynamics, the scalar and tensor power spectra become scale-dependent. Comparing with the Planck 2015 data, we find constraints on the total e-folds that the universe must have expanded since the bounce, in order to be consistent with current observations.Comment: revtex4, 23 figures, and 5 tables. Some typos were corrected. Phys. Rev. D 96, 083520 (2017
In this paper, we construct an effective rotating loop quantum black hole (LQBH) solution, starting from the spherical symmetric LQBH by applying the Newman-Janis algorithm modified by Azreg-Aïnou's non-complexification procedure, and study the effects of loop quantum gravity (LQG) on its shadow. Given the rotating LQBH, we discuss its horizon, ergosurface, and regularity as r → 0. Depending on the values of the specific angular momentum a and the polymeric function P arising from LQG, we find that the rotating solution we obtained can represent a regular black hole, a regular extreme black hole, or a regular spacetime without horizon (a non-black-hole solution). We also study the effects of LQG and rotation, and show that, in addition to the specific angular momentum, the polymeric function also causes deformations in the size and shape of the black hole shadow. Interestingly, for a given value of a and inclination angle θ0, the apparent size of the shadow monotonically decreases, and the shadow gets more distorted with increasing P . We also consider the effects of P on the deviations from the circularity of the shadow, and find that the deviation from circularity increases with increasing P for fixed values of a and θ0. Additionally, we explore the observational implications of P in comparing with the latest Event Horizon Telescope (EHT) observation of the supermassive black hole, M87*. The connection between the shadow radius and quasinormal modes in the eikonal limit as well as the deflection of massive particles are also considered.
We present a technique, {\em the uniform asymptotic approximation}, to construct accurate analytical solutions of the linear perturbations of inflation after quantum effects of the early universe are taken into account, for which the dispersion relations generically become nonlinear. We construct explicitly the error bounds associated with the approximations and then study them in detail. With the understanding of the errors and the proper choice of the Liouville transformations of the differential equations of the perturbations, we show that the analytical solutions describe the exact evolution of the linear perturbations extremely well even only in the first-order approximations. As an application of the approximate analytical solutions, we calculate the power spectra and indices of scalar and tensor perturbations in the slow-roll inflation, and find that the amplitudes of the power spectra get modified due to the quantum effects, while the power spectrum indices remain the same as in the linear case.Comment: The analysis of power spectra and indices of scalar and tensor perturbations are enlarged. Two figures added. arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1308.110
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