Logan Edward Hillberry Hillberry Optically Trapped Microspheres as Sensors of Mass and Sound

Optically Trapped Microspheres as Sensors of Mass and Sound

von Logan Edward Hillberry

Brownian Motion as Both Signal and Noise

Preis unbekannt

Buch in deiner Nähe kaufen


...oder deine aktuelle Postleitzahl eingeben:
oder

Beschreibung

This thesis makes significant advances in the use of microspheres in optical traps as highly precise sensing platforms. While optically trapped microspheres have recently proven their dominance in aqueous and vacuum environments, achieving state-of-the-art measurements of miniscule forces and torques, their sensitivity to perturbations in air has remained relatively unexplored. This thesis shows that, by uniquely operating in air and measuring its thermally-fluctuating instantaneous velocity, an optically trapped microsphere is an ultra-sensitive probe of both mass and sound. The mass of the microsphere is determined with similar accuracy to competitive methods but in a fraction of the measurement time and all while maintaining thermal equilibrium, unlike alternative methods. As an acoustic transducer, the air-based microsphere is uniquely sensitive to the velocity of sound, as opposed to the pressure measured by a traditional microphone. By comparison to state-of-the-art commercially-available velocity and pressure sensors, including the world’s smallest measurement microphone, the microsphere sensing modality is shown to be both accurate and to have superior sensitivity at high frequencies. Applications for such high-frequency acoustic sensing include dosage monitoring in proton therapy for cancer and event discrimination in bubble chamber searches for dark matter. In addition to reporting these scientific results, the thesis is pedagogically organized to present the relevant history, theory, and technology in a straightforward way.

This thesis makes significant advances in the use of microspheres in optical traps as highly precise sensing platforms. While optically trapped microspheres have recently proven their dominance in aqueous and vacuum environments, achieving state-of-the-art measurements of miniscule forces and torques, their sensitivity to perturbations in air has remained relatively unexplored. This thesis shows that, by uniquely operating in air and measuring its thermally-fluctuating instantaneous velocity, an optically trapped microsphere is an ultra-sensitive probe of both mass and sound. The mass of the microsphere is determined with similar accuracy to competitive methods but in a fraction of the measurement time and all while maintaining thermal equilibrium, unlike alternative methods. As an acoustic transducer, the air-based microsphere is uniquely sensitive to the velocity of sound, as opposed to the pressure measured by a traditional microphone. By comparison to state-of-the-art commercially-available velocity and pressure sensors, including the world’s smallest measurement microphone, the microsphere sensing modality is shown to be both accurate and to have superior sensitivity at high frequencies. Applications for such high-frequency acoustic sensing include dosage monitoring in proton therapy for cancer and event discrimination in bubble chamber searches for dark matter. In addition to reporting these scientific results, the thesis is pedagogically organized to present the relevant history, theory, and technology in a straightforward way.


Gives an accessible overview of the theory, the technology, and the history of the problem being investigated Nominated by the University of Texas at Austin, USA, as an outstanding Ph.D. thesis Presents significant advances in ultra-sensitive mass and sound sensing by optically trapped microspheres

Autor*in

Logan Edward Hillberry

Themen in »Optically Trapped Microspheres as Sensors of Mass and Sound«

Inertial mass sensing Sound detection Optical trapping High-precision sensing Mie scattering Optical tweezers Brownian motion Einstein-Ornstein-Uhlenbeck theory

Stimmen zu »Optically Trapped Microspheres as Sensors of Mass and Sound«

Details

ISBN: 9783031443343
Verlag: Springer International Publishing
Erscheinung: 18.11.2024

Link teilen


Über buchnah.de | Die Buchhandlungen | Die Verlage | Impressum & Kontakt | Datenschutz | Presse


Auf dieser Seite kannst Du Buchhandlungen in der Nähe finden