2,686 research outputs found
Design of broad-band PMD compensation filters
We describe a new design approach for broad-band polarization-mode dispersion (PMD) compensation filters. An efficient algorithm for minimization of the maximum differential group delay within a given frequency band is described
Measurement of high-order polarization mode dispersion
We demonstrate a new method to measure high-order polarization mode dispersion (PMD) using the Jones matrix exponential expansion. High-order PMD is characterized by measuring a series of characteristic matrices, which are convenient quantities for analyzing PMD effects in the time-domain. An experimental method is developed to estimate the validity range of the exponential expansion
Representation of second-order polarisation mode dispersion
A new expansion for the Jones matrix of a transmission medium is used to describe high-order polarisation dispersion. Each term in the expansion is characterised by a pair of principal states and the corresponding dispersion parameters. With these descriptors, a new expression for pulse deformation is derived and confirmed by simulation
Programming of inhomogeneous resonant guided wave networks
Photonic functions are programmed by designing the interference of local waves in inhomogeneous resonant guided wave networks composed of power-splitting elements arranged at the nodes of a nonuniform waveguide network. Using a compact, yet comprehensive, scattering matrix representation of the network, the desired photonic function is designed by fitting structural parameters according to an optimization procedure. This design scheme is demonstrated for plasmonic dichroic and trichroic routers in the infrared frequency range
Probing Supersymmetric Flavor Models with
We discuss the supersymmetric contribution to in various
supersymmetric flavor models. We find that in alignment models the
supersymmetric contribution could be significant while in heavy squark models
it is expected to be small. The situation is particularly interesting in models
that solve the flavor problems by either of the above mechanisms and the
remaining CP problems by means of approximate CP, that is, all CP violating
phases are small. In such models, the standard model contributions cannot
account for and a failure of the supersymmetric
contributions to do so would exclude the model. In models of alignment and
approximate CP, the supersymmetric contributions can account for
only if both the supersymmetric model parameters and the
hadronic parameters assume rather extreme values. Such models are then strongly
disfavored by the measurements. Models of heavy squarks
and approximate CP are excluded.Comment: 16 pages, harvmac. v2: We added a discussion of the intriguing
implications that would follow if a recent lattice result is confirme
Statistical determination of the length dependence of high-order polarization mode dispersion
We describe a method of characterizing high-order polarization mode dispersion (PMD).Using a new expansion to approximate the Jones matrix of a polarization-dispersive medium, we study the length dependence of high-order PMD to the fourth order. A simple rule for the asymptotic behavior of PMD for short and long fibers is found. It is also shown that, in long fibers (~1000 km), at 40 Gbits/s the third- and fourth-order PMD may become comparable to the second-order PMD
Contractions of Degenerate Quadratic Algebras, Abstract and Geometric
Quadratic algebras are generalizations of Lie algebras which include the
symmetry algebras of 2nd order superintegrable systems in 2 dimensions as
special cases. The superintegrable systems are exactly solvable physical
systems in classical and quantum mechanics. Distinct superintegrable systems
and their quadratic algebras can be related by geometric contractions, induced
by B\^ocher contractions of the conformal Lie algebra to itself. In 2 dimensions there are two kinds of quadratic algebras,
nondegenerate and degenerate. In the geometric case these correspond to 3
parameter and 1 parameter potentials, respectively. In a previous paper we
classified all abstract parameter-free nondegenerate quadratic algebras in
terms of canonical forms and determined which of these can be realized as
quadratic algebras of 2D nondegenerate superintegrable systems on constant
curvature spaces and Darboux spaces, and studied the relationship between
B\^ocher contractions of these systems and abstract contractions of the free
quadratic algebras. Here we carry out an analogous study of abstract
parameter-free degenerate quadratic algebras and their possible geometric
realizations. We show that the only free degenerate quadratic algebras that can
be constructed in phase space are those that arise from superintegrability. We
classify all B\^ocher contractions relating degenerate superintegrable systems
and, separately, all abstract contractions relating free degenerate quadratic
algebras. We point out the few exceptions where abstract contractions cannot be
realized by the geometric B\^ocher contractions
Polarization mode dispersion in radio-frequency interferometric embedded fiber-optic sensors
The effect of fiber birefringence on the propagation delay in an embedded fiber-optic strain sensor is studied. The polarization characteristics of the sensor are described in terms of polarization mode dispersion through the principal states of polarization and their differential group delay. Using these descriptors, an analytical expression for the response of the sensor for an arbitrary input state of polarization is given and experimentally verified. It is found that the differential group delay, as well as the input and output principal states of polarization, vary when the embedded fiber is strained, leading to fluctuations in the sensor output. The use of high birefringence fibers and different embedding geometries is examined as a means for reducing the polarization dependency of the sensor
Intrinsic localized modes in parametrically driven arrays of nonlinear resonators
We study intrinsic localized modes (ILMs), or solitons, in arrays of parametrically driven nonlinear resonators with application to microelectromechanical and nanoelectromechanical systems (MEMS and NEMS). The analysis is performed using an amplitude equation in the form of a nonlinear Schrödinger equation with a term corresponding to nonlinear damping (also known as a forced complex Ginzburg-Landau equation), which is derived directly from the underlying equations of motion of the coupled resonators, using the method of multiple scales. We investigate the creation, stability, and interaction of ILMs, show that they can form bound states, and that under certain conditions one ILM can split into two. Our findings are confirmed by simulations of the underlying equations of motion of the resonators, suggesting possible experimental tests of the theory
- …