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  1. null (Ed.)
    Matter’s sensitivity to light polarization is characterized by linear and circular polarization effects, corresponding to the system’s anisotropy and handedness, respectively. Recent investigations into the near-field properties of evanescent waves have revealed polarization states with out-of-phase transverse and longitudinal oscillations, resulting in trochoidal, or cartwheeling, field motion. Here, we demonstrate matter’s inherent sensitivity to the direction of the trochoidal field and name this property trochoidal dichroism. We observe trochoidal dichroism in the differential excitation of bonding and antibonding plasmon modes for a system composed of two coupled dipole scatterers. Trochoidal dichroism constitutes the observation of a geometric basis for polarization sensitivity that fundamentally differs from linear and circular dichroism. It could also be used to characterize molecular systems, such as certain light-harvesting antennas, with cartwheeling charge motion upon excitation. 
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  2. null (Ed.)
    Speech enhancement techniques that use a generative adversarial network (GAN) can effectively suppress noise while allowing models to be trained end-to-end. However, such techniques directly operate on time-domain waveforms, which are often highly-dimensional and require extensive computation. This paper proposes a novel GAN-based speech enhancement method, referred to as S-ForkGAN, that operates on log-power spectra rather than on time-domain speech waveforms, and uses a forked GAN structure to extract both speech and noise information. By operating on log-power spectra, one can seamlessly include conventional spectral subtraction techniques, and the parameter space typically has a lower dimension. The performance of S-ForkGAN is assessed for automatic speech recognition (ASR) using the TIMIT data set and a wide range of noise conditions. It is shown that S-ForkGAN outperforms existing GAN-based techniques and that it has a lower complexity. 
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  3. Abstract

    An important challenge in molecular assembly and hierarchical molecular engineering is to control and program the directional self‐assembly into chiral structures. Here, we present a versatile DNA surface adapter that can programmably self‐assemble into various chiral supramolecular architectures, thereby regulating the chiral directional “bonding” of gold nanorods decorated by the surface adapter. Distinct optical chirality relevant to the ensemble conformation is demonstrated from the assembled novel stair‐like and coil‐like gold nanorod chiral metastructures, which is strongly affected by the spatial arrangement of neighboring nanorod pair. Our strategy provides new avenues for fabrication of tunable optical metamaterials by manipulating the directional self‐assembly of nanoparticles using programmable surface adapters.

     
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  4. Abstract

    An important challenge in molecular assembly and hierarchical molecular engineering is to control and program the directional self‐assembly into chiral structures. Here, we present a versatile DNA surface adapter that can programmably self‐assemble into various chiral supramolecular architectures, thereby regulating the chiral directional “bonding” of gold nanorods decorated by the surface adapter. Distinct optical chirality relevant to the ensemble conformation is demonstrated from the assembled novel stair‐like and coil‐like gold nanorod chiral metastructures, which is strongly affected by the spatial arrangement of neighboring nanorod pair. Our strategy provides new avenues for fabrication of tunable optical metamaterials by manipulating the directional self‐assembly of nanoparticles using programmable surface adapters.

     
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