1,007 research outputs found
Antiresonant ring interferometer for laser cavity dumping, mode locking, and other applications
Applications in lasers for antiresonant ring interferometer include coupled laser cavities, variable laser-output coupling, intercavity harmonic-output coupling, mode locking, cavity dumping, and pulse code modulation
Laser system with an antiresonant optical ring
Various applications of an antiresonant ring, consisting of a beam splitter and a number of optical reflectors, are described. With a beam splitter having a transmission coefficient and a reflection coefficient, an optical beam incident on the beam splitter along a first axis is split into two components which circulate around the ring in opposite directions. They are recombined to reflect back the beam along the first axis, with none of the beam power being directed along a second axis. The ring can be part of the cavity of two otherwise independent lasers, with two separate laser mediums external to the ring, or with a multi-wavelength laser medium in the ring. The ring together with a second-harmonic generation crystal and a dispersive phase shifter in the ring can generate the second harmonic of an optical beam
Study of Laser Frequency Stability and Spectral Purity Semiannual Status Report, 1 Mar. - 31 Aug. 1968
Quantum phase noise and plasma-induced phase noise in He-Ne laser
Further Measurement of Quantum Phase Noise in a He-ne Laser
Measurement of spontaneous emission phase fluctation in helium, neon laser
PT-symmetric laser-absorber
In a recent work, Y.D. Chong et al. [Phys. Rev. Lett. {\bf 105}, 053901
(2010)] proposed the idea of a coherent perfect absorber (CPA) as the
time-reversed counterpart of a laser, in which a purely incoming radiation
pattern is completely absorbed by a lossy medium. The optical medium that
realizes CPA is obtained by reversing the gain with absorption, and thus it
generally differs from the lasing medium. Here it is shown that a laser with an
optical medium that satisfies the parity-time symmetry
condition for the dielectric
constant behaves simultaneously as a laser oscillator (i.e. it can emit
outgoing coherent waves) and as a CPA (i.e. it can fully absorb incoming
coherent waves with appropriate amplitudes and phases). Such a device can be
thus referred to as a -symmetric CPA-laser. The general
amplification/absorption features of the CPA-laser below lasing
threshold driven by two fields are determined.Comment: 5 pages; to be published in Phys. Rev. A (Rapid Communications
Impedance-matched cavity quantum memory
We consider an atomic frequency comb based quantum memory inside an
asymmetric optical cavity. In this configuration it is possible to absorb the
input light completely in a system with an effective optical depth of one,
provided that the absorption per cavity round trip exactly matches the
transmission of the coupling mirror ("impedance matching"). We show that the
impedance matching results in a readout efficiency only limited by irreversible
atomic dephasing, whose effect can be made very small in systems with large
inhomogeneous broadening. Our proposal opens up an attractive route towards
quantum memories with close to unit efficiency.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Complexity of 2D random laser modes at the transition from weak scattering to Anderson localization
The spatial extension and complexity of the eigenfunctions of an open
finite-size two-dimensional (2D) random system are systematically studied for a
random collection of systems ranging from weakly scattering to localized. The
eigenfunctions are obtained by introducing gain in the medium and pumping just
above threshold. All lasing modes are found to correspond to quasimodes of the
passive system, for all regimes of propagation. We demonstrate the existence of
multipeaked quasimodes or necklace states in 2D at the transition from
localized to diffusive, resulting from the coupling of localized states.Comment: Submitted to PR
Stimulated Emission from a single excited atom in a waveguide
We study stimulated emission from an excited two-level atom coupled to a
waveguide containing an incident single-photon pulse. We show that the strong
photon correlation, as induced by the atom, plays a very important role in
stimulated emission. Additionally, the temporal duration of the incident photon
pulse is shown to have a marked effect on stimulated emission and atomic
lifetime.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure
Studies of laser and laser devices
The generation of tunable, infrared, and ultraviolet light, and the control of this light by mode-locking and modulation techniques are discussed. Particular emphasis is given to energy storage and extraction using atomic levels, the development of a tunable narrowband vacuum ultraviolet light source, and to the generation and applications of ultrashort optical pulses
Studies on lasers and laser devices
The goal of this grant was to study lasers, laser devices, and uses of lasers for investigating physical phenomena are studied. The active projects included the development of a tunable, narrowband XUV light source and its application to the spectroscopy of core excited atomic states, and the development of a technique for picosecond time resolution spectroscopy of fast photophysical processes
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