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Dive into the research topics where James E. Goeders is active.

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Featured researches published by James E. Goeders.


Physical Review A | 2010

Detection of single-ion spectra by Coulomb-crystal heating

Craig Robert Clark; James E. Goeders; Yatis Dodia; C. Ricardo Viteri; Kenneth R. Brown

The coupled motion of ions in a radiofrequency trap has been used to connect the frequency-dependent laser-induced heating of a sympathetically cooled spectroscopy ion with changes in the fluorescence of a laser-cooled control ion. This technique, sympathetic heating spectroscopy, is demonstrated using two isotopes of calcium. In the experiment, a few scattered photons from the spectroscopy ion are transformed into a large deviation from the steady-state fluorescence of the control ion. This allows us to detect an optical transition where the number of scattered photons is below our fluorescence detection limit. Possible applications of the technique to molecular ion spectroscopy are briefly discussed.


Pharmacology, Biochemistry and Behavior | 2009

Escalation of food-maintained responding and sensitivity to the locomotor stimulant effects of cocaine in mice

James E. Goeders; Kevin S. Murnane; Matthew L. Banks; William E. Fantegrossi

Escalation of drug self-administration is a consequence of extended drug access and is thought to be specifically related to addiction, but few studies have investigated whether intake of non-drug reinforcers may also escalate with extended-access. The goal of these studies was to determine the effects of limited and extended-access to food reinforcers on behavioral and pharmacological endpoints in mice. In distinct groups, responding on a lever was maintained by liquid reinforcement, or nose-poke responses were maintained by sucrose pellets or liquid food in sessions lasting 1 h (limited-access) or 10 h (extended-access). The reinforcing strength of each food, as well as reinforcer-associated cues, was tested before and after extended-access using a progressive ratio (PR) schedule, and locomotor activity in response to novelty and increasing doses of cocaine was assessed in an open field setting in all animals after access to food reinforcers. Escalation of lever-pressing behavior reinforced by liquid food, but not nose-poke behavior reinforced by liquid food or sucrose pellets, was observed across successive extended-access sessions. A concomitant increase in the reinforcing strength of liquid food and its associated cues was apparent in mice that escalated their responding, but not in mice that did not escalate. Finally, extended reinforcer access leading to behavioral escalation was accompanied by an increased sensitivity to the psychostimulant effects of cocaine compared to limited-access. These findings indicate that behavioral escalation can develop as a consequence of extended-access to a non-drug reinforcer, although both the nature of the reinforcer (liquid versus solid food) and the topography of the operant response (lever versus nose-poke) modulate its development. These data also suggest that some of the behavioral and pharmacological corrolaries of behavioral escalation observed following extended-access to drug self-administration may not be due to drug exposure, but rather, may result from basic behavioral processes which underlie operant responding maintained by appetitive stimuli.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2013

Identifying single molecular ions by resolved sideband measurements.

James E. Goeders; Craig Robert Clark; Grahame Vittorini; Kenneth Wright; Viteri Cr; Kenneth R. Brown

The masses of single molecular ions are nondestructively measured by cotrapping the ion of interest with a laser-cooled atomic ion, (40)Ca(+). Measurement of the resolved sidebands of a dipole forbidden transition on the atomic ion reveals the normal-mode frequencies of the two ion system. The mass of two molecular ions, (40)CaH(+) and (40)Ca(16)O(+), are then determined from the normal-mode frequencies. Isotopes of Ca(+) are used to determine the effects of stray electric fields on the normal mode measurement. The future use of resolved sideband experiments for molecular spectroscopy is also discussed.


New Journal of Physics | 2015

Sympathetic cooling of molecular ion motion to the ground state

Rene Rugango; James E. Goeders; Thomas H. Dixon; John M. Gray; Ncamiso Khanyile; Gang Shu; Robert J. Clark; Kenneth R. Brown

We demonstrate sympathetic sideband cooling of a


PROCEEDINGS OF THE INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE OF COMPUTATIONAL METHODS IN SCIENCES AND ENGINEERING 2010 (ICCMSE-2010) | 2015

Laser-cooled atomic ions as probes of molecular ions

Kenneth R. Brown; C. Ricardo Viteri; Craig Robert Clark; James E. Goeders; Ncamiso Khanyile; Grahame Vittorini

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Archive | 2015

MULTI-CELL APPARATUS AND METHOD FOR SINGLE ION ADDRESSING

Matthew Edward Lewis Jungwirth; James E. Goeders

CaH


Archive | 2014

Scalable Multiplexed Ion Trap Fabrication Using Ball Grid Arrays

Dan Youngner; Matthew Edward Lewis Jungwirth; James E. Goeders; Thomas R. Ohnstein; Matt Marcus; Nicholas D. Guise; Jason M. Amini; Spencer D. Fallek; Curtis Volin; Alexa W. Harter

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Archive | 2017

MICRO-STRUCTURED ATOMIC SOURCE SYSTEM

James E. Goeders; Matthew S. Marcus; Thomas R. Ohnstein; Terry Dean Stark

molecular ion co-trapped with a


Archive | 2017

Preparation cell systems and methods of a preparing a state of laser light

James E. Goeders; Matthew Edward Lewis Jungwirth

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Archive | 2016

Optical preparation cell and methods

James E. Goeders; Matthew Edward Lewis Jungwirth

Ca

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Kenneth R. Brown

Georgia Institute of Technology

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Craig Robert Clark

Georgia Institute of Technology

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Grahame Vittorini

Georgia Institute of Technology

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C. Ricardo Viteri

Georgia Institute of Technology

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Ncamiso Khanyile

Georgia Institute of Technology

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William E. Fantegrossi

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

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Yatis Dodia

Georgia Institute of Technology

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