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Toshiya Kinoshita

Researcher at Pennsylvania State University

Publications -  6
Citations -  3059

Toshiya Kinoshita is an academic researcher from Pennsylvania State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Bose gas & Tonks–Girardeau gas. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 5 publications receiving 2741 citations.

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A quantum Newton's cradle

TL;DR: The preparation of out-of-equilibrium arrays of trapped one-dimensional Bose gases, each containing from 40 to 250 87Rb atoms, which do not noticeably equilibrate even after thousands of collisions are reported.
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Observation of a one-dimensional Tonks-Girardeau gas.

TL;DR: The observation of a one-dimensional (1D) Tonks-Girardeau (TG) gas of bosons moving freely in 1D, where the gas bosons are strongly interacting, they behave very much like noninteracting fermions.
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Local pair correlations in one-dimensional Bose gases.

TL;DR: This work measures photoassociation rates in one-dimensional Bose gases, and determines the local pair correlation function over a wide range of coupling strengths, thus directly observing the fermionization of bosons.
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All-optical Bose-Einstein condensation using a compressible crossed dipole trap

TL;DR: In this paper, an all-optical method of making a Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC) was described, where atoms are first cooled in an optical lattice and loaded into a crossed dipole trap with $1.06\phantom{\rule{0.3em}{0ex}}\ensuremath{m}$ light, then the density is increased by dynamically reducing the trap size, while the atoms are evaporatively cooled by reducing the light intensity.
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Enhancement of catalytic activity by addition of chlorine in chemical vapor deposition growth of carbon nanotube forests

TL;DR: In this article , the authors reported on the improvement of the catalytic activity by chlorine addition during the CNT forest growth process, and the addition of Cl2 enhanced the diffusion rate of carbon in the catalysts, and thus changed the rate-limiting step from iron diffusion in the catalyst to the feedstock gas decomposition on the catalyst surface, leading to a higher growth rate and longer catalyst lifetime.