Chandra Shahi
Tulane University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Chandra Shahi.
Physical Review D | 2016
Ke Li; Muhammad Arif; David G. Cory; Robert Haun; Benjamin Heacock; Michael G. Huber; J. Nsofini; Dimitry A. Pushin; Parminder Saggu; Dusan Sarenac; Chandra Shahi; Vladimir Skavysh; W. M. Snow; A. R. Young
The physical origin of the dark energy that causes the accelerated expansion rate of the universe is one of the major open questions of cosmology. One set of theories postulates the existence of a self-interacting scalar field for dark energy coupling to matter. In the chameleon dark energy theory, this coupling induces a screening mechanism such that the field amplitude is nonzero in empty space but is greatly suppressed in regions of terrestrial matter density. However measurements performed under appropriate vacuum conditions can enable the chameleon field to appear in the apparatus, where it can be subjected to laboratory experiments. Here we report the most stringent upper bound on the free neutron-chameleon coupling in the strongly-coupled limit of the chameleon theory using neutron interferometric techniques. Our experiment sought the chameleon field through the relative phase shift it would induce along one of the neutron paths inside a perfect crystal neutron interferometer. The amplitude of the chameleon field was actively modulated by varying the millibar pressures inside a dual-chamber aluminum cell. We report a 95% confidence level upper bound on
Optics Express | 2016
Dusan Sarenac; Michael G. Huber; Benjamin Heacock; Muhammad Arif; Charles W. Clark; David G. Cory; Chandra Shahi; Dimitry A. Pushin
We use a Mach-Zehnder interferometer to perform neutron holography of a spiral phase plate. The object beam passes through a spiral phase plate, acquiring the phase twist characteristic of orbital angular momentum states. The reference beam passes through a fused silica prism, acquiring a linear phase gradient. The resulting hologram is a fork dislocation image, which could be used to reconstruct neutron beams with various orbital angular momenta. This work paves the way for novel applications of neutron holography, diffraction and imaging.
Advances in High Energy Physics | 2015
Dimitry A. Pushin; Michael G. Huber; Muhammad Arif; Chandra Shahi; J. Nsofini; Christopher J. Wood; Dusan Sarenac; David G. Cory
Neutron interferometry has proved to be a very precise technique for measuring the quantum mechanical phase of a neutron caused by a potential energy difference between two spatially separated neutron paths inside interferometer. The path length inside the interferometer can be many centimeters (and many centimeters apart) making it very practical to study a variety of samples, fields, potentials, and other macroscopic medium and quantum effects. The precision of neutron interferometry comes at a cost; neutron interferometers are very susceptible to environmental noise that is typically mitigated with large, active isolated enclosures. With recent advances in quantum information processing especially quantum error correction (QEC) codes we were able to demonstrate a neutron interferometer that is insensitive to vibrational noise. A facility at NIST’s Center for Neutron Research (NCNR) has just been commissioned with higher neutron flux than the NCNR’s older interferometer setup. This new facility is based on QEC neutron interferometer, thus improving the accessibility of neutron interferometry to the greater scientific community and expanding its applications to quantum computing, gravity, and material research.
Review of Scientific Instruments | 2016
Parminder Saggu; Taisiya Mineeva; Muhammad Arif; David G. Cory; Robert Haun; Ben Heacock; Michael G. Huber; Ke Li; J. Nsofini; Dusan Sarenac; Chandra Shahi; Vladimir Skavysh; W. M. Snow; Samuel A. Werner; A. R. Young; Dmitriy Pushin
Neutron interferometry enables precision measurements that are typically operated within elaborate, multi-layered facilities which provide substantial shielding from environmental noise. These facilities are necessary to maintain the coherence requirements in a perfect crystal neutron interferometer which is extremely sensitive to local environmental conditions such as temperature gradients across the interferometer, external vibrations, and acoustic waves. The ease of operation and breadth of applications of perfect crystal neutron interferometry would greatly benefit from a mode of operation which relaxes these stringent isolation requirements. Here, the INDEX Collaboration and National Institute of Standards and Technology demonstrates the functionality of a neutron interferometer in vacuum and characterize the use of a compact vacuum chamber enclosure as a means to isolate the interferometer from spatial temperature gradients and time-dependent temperature fluctuations. The vacuum chamber is found to have no depreciable effect on the performance of the interferometer (contrast) while improving system stability, thereby showing that it is feasible to replace large temperature isolation and control systems with a compact vacuum enclosure for perfect crystal neutron interferometry.
Physical Review C | 2014
Michael G. Huber; Muhammad Arif; Wangchun C. Chen; Thomas R. Gentile; Daniel S. Hussey; T. Black; Dimitry A. Pushin; Chandra Shahi; Fred E. Wietfeldt; L. Yang
We report a determination of the n-
Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2016
Chandra Shahi; Muhammad Arif; David G. Cory; Taisiya Mineeva; J. Nsofini; Dusan Sarenac; C.J. Williams; Michael G. Huber; Dimitry A. Pushin
^3
Physical Review B | 2018
Puskar Bhattarai; Abhirup Patra; Chandra Shahi; John P. Perdew
He scattering length difference
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2018
Chandra Shahi; Jianwei Sun; John P. Perdew
\Delta b^{\prime} = b_{1}^{\prime}-b_{0}^{\prime} =
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2018
Puskar Bhattarai; Chandra Shahi; Abhirup Patra; John P. Perdew
(
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2018
Abhirup Patra; Chandra Shahi; Puskar Bhattarai; John P. Perdew
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