2,550 research outputs found

    Measurement of the linear thermo-optical coefficient of Ga0.51_{0.51}In0.49_{0.49}P using photonic crystal nanocavities

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    Ga0.51_{0.51}In0.49_{0.49}P is a promising candidate for thermally tunable nanophotonic devices due to its low thermal conductivity. In this work we study its thermo-optical response. We obtain the linear thermo-optical coefficient dn/dT=2.0±0.3104K1dn/dT=2.0\pm0.3\cdot 10^{-4}\,\rm{K}^{-1} by investigating the transmission properties of a single mode-gap photonic crystal nanocavity.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure

    Nonlinear response of a gallium phosphide nanopatterned photonic waveguide in the CW regime

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    International audienceThe third-order Kerr nonlinear response in gallium phos-phide nanoscale waveguides is measured through continuous wave (CW) four-wave mixing. The extracted nonlinear coefficient ranges from about 800 W −1 m −1 to 1400 W −1 m −1 , consistently with an estimated material nonlinearity n 2 ˆ 3.5 × 10 −18 W −1 m 2. The roles of the residual absorption and the related thermal effects are discussed

    Oscillatory dynamics in nanocavities with noninstantaneous Kerr response

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    We investigate the impact of a finite response time of Kerr nonlinearities over the onset of spontaneous oscillations (self-pulsing) occurring in a nanocavity. The complete characterization of the underlying Hopf bifurcation in the full parameter space allows us to show the existence of a critical value of the response time and to envisage different regimes of competition with bistability. The transition from a stable oscillatory state to chaos is found to occur only in cavities which are detuned far off-resonance, which turns out to be mutually exclusive with the region where the cavity can operate as a bistable switch

    Tuning out disorder-induced localization in nanophotonic cavity arrays

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    Weakly coupled high-Q nanophotonic cavities are building blocks of slow-light waveguides and other nanophotonic devices. Their functionality critically depends on tuning as resonance frequencies should stay within the bandwidth of the device. Unavoidable disorder leads to random frequency shifts which cause localization of the light in single cavities. We present a new method to finely tune individual resonances of light in a system of coupled nanocavities. We use holographic laser-induced heating and address thermal crosstalk between nanocavities using a response matrix approach. As a main result we observe a simultaneous anticrossing of 3 nanophotonic resonances, which were initially split by disorder.Comment: 11 page

    Direct coupling of nonlinear integrated cavities for all-optical reservoir computing

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    We consider theoretically a network of directly coupled optical microcavities to implement a space-multiplexed optical neural network in an integrated nanophotonic circuit. Nonlinear photonic network integrations based on direct coupling ensures a highly dense integration, reducing the chip footprint by several orders of magnitude compared to other implementations. Different nonlinear effects inherent to such microcavities are studied when used for realizing an all-optical autonomous computing substrate, here based on the reservoir computing concept. We provide an in-depth analysis of the impact of basic microcavity parameters on computational metrics of the system, namely, the dimensionality and the consistency. Importantly, we find that differences between frequencies and bandwidths of supermodes formed by the direct coupling is the determining factor of the reservoir's dimensionality and its scalability. The network's dimensionality can be improved with frequency-shifting nonlinear effects such as the Kerr effect, while two-photon absorption has an opposite effect. Finally, we demonstrate in simulation that the proposed reservoir is capable of solving the Mackey-Glass prediction and the optical signal recovery tasks at GHz timescale
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