305 research outputs found
An achromatic polarization retarder realized with slowly varying linear and circular birefringence
Using the phenomena of linear and circular birefringence we propose a device
that can alter general elliptical polarization of a beam by a predetermined
amount, thereby allowing conversion between linearly-polarized light and
circularly polarized light or changes to the handedness of the polarization.
Based on an analogy with two-state adiabatic following of quantum optics, the
proposed device is insensitive to the frequency of the light -- it serves as an
achromatic polarization retarder
Oblique frozen modes in periodic layered media
We study the classical scattering problem of a plane electromagnetic wave
incident on the surface of semi-infinite periodic stratified media
incorporating anisotropic dielectric layers with special oblique orientation of
the anisotropy axes. We demonstrate that an obliquely incident light, upon
entering the periodic slab, gets converted into an abnormal grazing mode with
huge amplitude and zero normal component of the group velocity. This mode
cannot be represented as a superposition of extended and evanescent
contributions. Instead, it is related to a general (non-Bloch) Floquet
eigenmode with the amplitude diverging linearly with the distance from the slab
boundary. Remarkably, the slab reflectivity in such a situation can be very
low, which means an almost 100% conversion of the incident light into the
axially frozen mode with the electromagnetic energy density exceeding that of
the incident wave by several orders of magnitude. The effect can be realized at
any desirable frequency, including optical and UV frequency range. The only
essential physical requirement is the presence of dielectric layers with proper
oblique orientation of the anisotropy axes. Some practical aspects of this
phenomenon are considered.Comment: text and 9 figure
Dielectric multilayer waveguides for TE and TM mode matching
We analyse theoretically for the first time to our knowledge the perfect
phase matching of guided TE and TM modes with a multilayer waveguide composed
of linear isotropic dielectric materials. Alongside strict investigation into
dispersion relations for multilayer systems, we give an explicit qualitative
explanation for the phenomenon of mode matching on the basis of the standard
one-dimensional homogenization technique, and discuss the minimum number of
layers and the refractive index profile for the proposed device scheme. Direct
applications of the scheme include polarization-insensitive, intermodal
dispersion-free planar propagation, efficient fibre-to-planar waveguide
coupling and, potentially, mode filtering. As a self-sufficient result, we
present compact analytical expressions for the mode dispersion in a finite,
N-period, three-layer dielectric superlattice.Comment: 13 pages with figure
Polarization resolved angular patterns in nematic liquid crystal cells
We study the angular structure of polarization of light transmitted through a
nematic liquid crystal (NLC) cell by theoretically analyzing the polarization
state as a function of the incidence angles. For a uniformly aligned NLC cell,
the matrix formalism and the orthogonality relations are used to
derive the analytical expressions for the transmission and reflection matrices.
The polarization resolved angular patterns in the two-dimensional projection
plane are characterized in terms of the polarization singularities: C points
(points of circular polarization) and L lines (lines of linear polarization).
In the case of linearly polarized plane waves incident on the homeotropically
aligned cell, we present the results of detailed theoretical analysis
describing the structure of the polarization singularities. We apply the theory
to compute the polarization patterns for various orientational structures in
the NLC cell and discuss the effects induced by the director orientation and
biaxiality.Comment: pdflatex, rextex4, 22 pages, 7 figures (jpeg
Photoinduced 3D orientational order in side chain liquid crystalline azopolymers
We apply experimental technique based on the combination of methods dealing
with principal refractive indices and absorption coefficients to study the
photoinduced 3D orientational order in the films of liquid crystalline (LC)
azopolymers. The technique is used to identify 3D orientational configurations
of trans azobenzene chromophores and to characterize the degree of ordering in
terms of order parameters. We study two types of LC azopolymers which form
structures with preferred in-plane and out-of-plane alignment of
azochromophores, correspondingly. Using irradiation with the polarized light of
two different wavelengths we find that the kinetics of photoinduced anisotropy
can be dominated by either photo-reorientation or photoselection mechanisms
depending on the wavelength. We formulate the phenomenological model describing
the kinetics of photoinduced anisotropy in terms of the isomer concentrations
and the order parameter tensor. We present the numerical results for absorption
coefficients that are found to be in good agreement with the experimental data.
The model is also used to interpret the effect of changing the mechanism with
the wavelength of the pumping light.Comment: uses revtex4 28 pages, 10 figure
Metamaterials proposed as perfect magnetoelectrics
Magnetoelectric susceptibility of a metamaterial built from split ring
resonators have been investigated both experimentally and within an equivalent
circuit model. The absolute values have been shown to exceed by two orders of
magnitude that of classical magnetoelectric materials. The metamaterial
investigated reaches the theoretically predicted value of the magnetoelectric
susceptibility which is equal to the geometric average of the electric and
magnetic susceptibilities.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Geometrically-controlled twist transitions in nematic cells
We study geometrically-controlled twist transitions of a nematic confined
between a sinusoidal grating and a flat substrate. In these cells the
transition to the twisted state is driven by surface effects. We have
identified the mechanisms responsible for the transition analytically and used
exact numerical calculations to study the range of surface parameters where the
twist instability occurs. Close to these values the cell operates under minimal
external fields or temperature variations
Proximity induced metal/insulator transition in superlattices
The far-infrared dielectric response of superlattices (SL) composed of
superconducting YBaCuO (YBCO) and ferromagnetic La%
CaMnO (LCMO) has been investigated by ellipsometry. A drastic
decrease of the free carrier response is observed which involves an unusually
large length scale of d20 nm in YBCO and d10
nm in LCMO. A corresponding suppression of metallicity is not observed in SLs
where LCMO is replaced by the paramagnetic metal LaNiO. Our data suggest
that either a long range charge transfer from the YBCO to the LCMO layers or
alternatively a strong coupling of the charge carriers to the different and
competitive kind of magnetic correlations in the LCMO and YBCO layers are at
the heart of the observed metal/insulator transition. The low free carrier
response observed in the far-infrared dielectric response of the magnetic
superconductor RuSrGdCuO is possibly related to this effect
Large Coherence Area Thin-Film Photonic Stop-Band Lasers
We demonstrate that the shift of the stop band position with increasing
oblique angle in periodic structures results in a wide transverse exponential
field distribution corresponding to strong angular confinement of the
radiation. The beam expansion follows an effective diffusive equation depending
only upon the spectral mode width. In the presence of gain, the beam cross
section is limited only by the size of the gain area. As an example of an
active periodic photonic medium, we calculate and measure laser emission from a
dye-doped cholesteric liquid crystal film
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