475 research outputs found

    Photonic clocks, Raman lasers, and Biosensors on Silicon

    Get PDF
    Micro-resonators on silicon having Q factors as high as 500 million are described, and used to demonstrate radio-frequency mechanical oscillators, micro-Raman and parametric sources with sub-100 microwatt thresholds, visible sources, as well as high-sensitivity, biological detectors

    Rural Research Brief: The Four-Day School Week: Information and Recommendations

    Get PDF
    Within the past three decades, a number of schools and districts, particularly those in rural areas, have moved toward a four-day school week. Recent articles and reprots indicate that there are now schools with four-day weeks in Colorado, Wyoming, South Dakota, Louisiana, New Mexico, Idaho, and Nebraska. The reasons for this shift include saving money int he face of declining enrollments and avoiding interruptions and abscences due to sports and activities. Districts contemplating the four-day week need current information about this alternative schedule and how it is working in schools around the country. This report is intended to summarize recent research and other articles on the four-day week and make recommendations to district personnel on whether and how it should be implemented

    THE DEVELOPMENT OF ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE CURRICULUM FOR ADULT LEARNERS AT THE ADULT EDUCATION CENTER OF THE PALM BEACH COUNTY SCHOOL DISTRICT

    Get PDF
    Due to social, economical, physiological and technological changes in our environment, the School District of Palm Beach County is preparing to satisfy the learning needs of the adult learners by developing Artificial Intelligence courses that will enable them to adapt to changes in their environment. This calls for the implementation of an artificial intelligence systems curriculum as one of the preparation and several measures of adult student learning. The research question is: “What should be included in a curriculum for adult learners to acquire knowledge and to improve and transfer their knowledge?” The research question was answered by a thorough review of literature on the subject of intelligence systems. The formative committee provided a magnitude detail and attention to the creation of the curriculum guide. Suggestions were made by the formative committee concerning the content of the artificial intelligence development curriculum guide and its implementation. The initial draft of the curriculum was review by the formative committee and a feedback was relayed to the researcher. The summative committee effectively judged the curriculum design, and the curriculum guide was validated by the committee. It was recommended that the Artificial Intelligence Curriculum be applied only to adult learners at the Adult education center of the Palm Beach School District. It was certain that the curriculum adhered to the School District mission, that is to provide excellence and well rounded education to individual adult and displaced student

    Observation of Spontaneous Brillouin Cooling

    Full text link
    While radiation-pressure cooling is well known, the Brillouin scattering of light from sound is considered an acousto-optical amplification-only process. It was suggested that cooling could be possible in multi-resonance Brillouin systems when phonons experience lower damping than light. However, this regime was not accessible in traditional Brillouin systems since backscattering enforces high acoustical frequencies associated with high mechanical damping. Recently, forward Brillouin scattering in microcavities has allowed access to low-frequency acoustical modes where mechanical dissipation is lower than optical dissipation, in accordance with the requirements for cooling. Here we experimentally demonstrate cooling via such a forward Brillouin process in a microresonator. We show two regimes of operation for the Brillouin process: acoustical amplification as is traditional, but also for the first time, a Brillouin cooling regime. Cooling is mediated by an optical pump, and scattered light, that beat and electrostrictively attenuate the Brownian motion of the mechanical mode.Comment: Supplementary material include

    Temperature measurement and stabilization in a birefringent whispering gallery resonator

    Full text link
    Temperature measurement with nano-Kelvin resolution is demonstrated at room temperature, based on the thermal dependence of an optical crystal anisotropy in a high quality whispering gallery resonator. As the resonator's TE and TM modes frequencies have different temperature coefficients, their differential shift provides a sensitive measurement of the temperature variation, which is used for active stabilization of the temperature

    Actuation of Micro-Optomechanical Systems Via Cavity-Enhanced Optical Dipole Forces

    Get PDF
    We demonstrate a new type of optomechanical system employing a movable, micron-scale waveguide evanescently-coupled to a high-Q optical microresonator. Micron-scale displacements of the waveguide are observed for milliwatt(mW)-level optical input powers. Measurement of the spatial variation of the force on the waveguide indicates that it arises from a cavity-enhanced optical dipole force due to the stored optical field of the resonator. This force is used to realize an all-optical tunable filter operating with sub-mW control power. A theoretical model of the system shows the maximum achievable force to be independent of the intrinsic Q of the optical resonator and to scale inversely with the cavity mode volume, suggesting that such forces may become even more effective as devices approach the nanoscale.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures. High resolution version available at (http://copilot.caltech.edu/publications/CEODF_hires.pdf). For associated movie, see (http://copilot.caltech.edu/research/optical_forces/index.htm

    Stimulated optomechanical excitation of surface acoustic waves in a microdevice

    Full text link
    Stimulated Brillouin interaction between sound and light, known to be the strongest optical nonlinearity common to all amorphous and crystalline dielectrics, has been widely studied in fibers and bulk materials but rarely in optical microresonators. The possibility of experimentally extending this principle to excite mechanical resonances in photonic microsystems, for sensing and frequency reference applications, has remained largely unexplored. The challenge lies in the fact that microresonators inherently have large free spectral range, while the phase matching considerations for the Brillouin process require optical modes of nearby frequencies but with different wavevectors. We rely on high-order transverse optical modes to relax this limitation. Here we report on the experimental excitation of mechanical resonances ranging from 49 to 1400 MHz by using forward Brillouin scattering. These natural mechanical resonances are excited in ~100 um silica microspheres, and are of a surface-acoustic whispering-gallery type

    Nonlinear dynamics and chaos in an optomechanical beam

    Get PDF
    [EN] Optical nonlinearities, such as thermo-optic mechanisms and free-carrier dispersion, are often considered unwelcome effects in silicon-based resonators and, more specifically, optomechanical cavities, since they affect, for instance, the relative detuning between an optical resonance and the excitation laser. Here, we exploit these nonlinearities and their intercoupling with the mechanical degrees of freedom of a silicon optomechanical nanobeam to unveil a rich set of fundamentally different complex dynamics. By smoothly changing the parameters of the excitation laser we demonstrate accurate control to activate two-and four-dimensional limit cycles, a period-doubling route and a six-dimensional chaos. In addition, by scanning the laser parameters in opposite senses we demonstrate bistability and hysteresis between two-and four-dimensional limit cycles, between different coherent mechanical states and between four-dimensional limit cycles and chaos. Our findings open new routes towards exploiting silicon-based optomechanical photonic crystals as a versatile building block to be used in neurocomputational networks and for chaos-based applications.This work was supported by the European Comission project PHENOMEN (H2020-EU-713450), the Spanish Severo Ochoa Excellence program and the MINECO project PHENTOM (FIS2015-70862-P). DNU, PDG and MFC gratefully acknowledge the support of a Ramon y Cajal postdoctoral fellowship (RYC-2014-15392), a Beatriu de Pinos postdoctoral fellowship (BP-DGR 2015 (B) and a Severo Ochoa studentship, respectively. We would like to acknowledge Jose C. Sabina de Lis, J.M. Plata Suarez, A. Trifonova and C. Masoller for fruitful discussions.Navarro-Urrios, D.; Capuj, NE.; Colombano, MF.; García, PD.; Sledzinska, M.; Alzina, F.; Griol Barres, A.... (2017). Nonlinear dynamics and chaos in an optomechanical beam. Nature Communications. 8. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms14965S8Strogatz, S. H. Nonlinear Dynamics and Chaos: With Applications to Physics, Biology, Chemistry, and Engineering Westview Press (2014).Lorenz, E. N. Deterministic nonperiodic ow. J. Atmos. Sci. 20, 130–141 (1963).Sparrow, C. The Lorenz Attractor: Bifurcations, Chaos and Strange Attractors Springer (1982).Aspelmeyer, M., Kippenberg, T. & Marquardt, F. Cavity optomechanics. Rev. Mod. Phys. 86, 1391 (2014).Kippenberg, T., Rokhsari, H., Carmon, T., Scherer, A. & Vahala, K. Analysis of radiation-pressure induced mechanical oscillation of an optical microcavity. Phys. Rev. Lett. 95, 033901 (2005).Marquardt, F., Harris, J. G. E. & Girvin, S. M. Dynamical multistability induced by radiation pressure in high-finesse micromechanical optical cavities. Phys. Rev. Lett. 96, 103901 (2006).Krause, A. G. et al. Nonlinear radiation pressure dynamics in an optomechanical crystal. Phys. Rev. Lett. 115, 233601 (2015).Metzger, C. et al. Self-induced oscillations in an optomechanical system driven by bolometric backaction. Phys. Rev. Lett. 101, 133903 (2008).Bakemeier, L., Alvermann, A. & Fehske, H. Route to chaos in optomechanics. Phys. Rev. Lett. 114, 013601 (2015).Sciamanna, M. & Shore, K. A. Physics and applications of laser diode chaos. Nat. Photon. 9, 151–162 (2015).Williams, C. R. et al. Experimental observations of group synchrony in a system of chaotic optoelectronic oscillators. Phys. Rev. Lett. 110, 064104 (2013).Sciamanna, M. Optomechanics: vibrations copying optical chaos. Nat. Photon. 10, 366–368 (2016).Carmon, T., Cross, M. C. & Vahala, K. J. Chaotic quivering of micron-scaled on-chip resonators excited by centrifugal optical pressure. Phys. Rev. Lett. 98, 167203 (2007).Carmon, T., Rokhsari, H., Yang, L., Kippenberg, T. J. & Vahala, K. J. Temporal behavior of radiation-pressure-induced vibrations of an optical microcavity phonon mode. Phys. Rev. Lett. 94, 223902 (2005).Monifi, F. et al. Optomechanically induced stochastic resonance and chaos transfer between optical fields. Nat. Photon. 10, 399–405 (2016).Wu, J. et al. Dynamical chaos in chip-scale optomechanical oscillators. Preprint at https://arxiv.org/abs/1608.05071 (2016).Navarro-Urrios, D., Tredicucci, A. & Sotomayor-Torres, C. M. Coherent phonon generation in optomechanical crystals. SPIE Newsroom, doi:10.1117/2.1201507.006036 (2015).Navarro-Urrios, D. et al. A self-stabilized coherent phonon source driven by optical forces. Sci. Rep. 5, 15733 (2015).Johnson, T. J., Borselli, M. & Painter, O. Self-induced optical modulation of the transmission through a high-Q silicon microdisk resonator. Opt. Express 14, 817–831 (2006).Navarro-Urrios, D. et al. Self-sustained coherent phonon generation in optomechanical cavities. J. Opt. 18, 094006 (2016).Kemiktarak, U., Durand, M., Metcalfe, M. & Lawall, J. Mode competition and anomalous cooling in a multimode phonon laser. Phys. Rev. Lett. 113, 030802 (2014).Rosenstein, M. T., Collins, J. J. & De Luca, C. J. A practical method for calculating largest Lyapunov exponents from small data sets. Physica D 65, 117–134 (1993).Sprott, J. C. Chaos and Time-Series Analysis Vol. 69, Citeseer (2003).Grassberger, P. & Procaccia, I. Characterization of strange attractors. Phys. Rev. Lett. 50, 346–349 (1983).Hoppensteadt, F. C. & Izhikevich, E. M. Synchronization of MEMS resonators and mechanical neurocomputing. IEEE Trans. Circuits Syst. I, Reg. Papers 48, 133–138 (2001).Pennec, Y. et al. Band gaps and cavity modes in dual phononic and photonic strip waveguides. AIP Adv. 1, 041901 (2011).Gomis-Bresco, J. et al. A one-dimensional optomechanical crystal with a complete phononic band gap. Nat. Commun. 5, 4452 (2014).Johnson, S. G. et al. Perturbation theory for Maxwells equations with shifting material boundaries. Phys. Rev. E 65, 066611 (2002).Chan, J., Safavi-Naeini, A. H., Hill, J. T., Meenehan, S. & Painter, O. Optimized optomechanical crystal cavity with acoustic radiation shield. Appl. Phys. Lett. 101, 081115 (2012).Pennec, Y. et al. Modeling light-sound interaction in nanoscale cavities and waveguides. Nanophotonics 3, 413–440 (2014)
    • …
    corecore