297 research outputs found
Electron-hole asymmetry and two-state lasing in quantum dot lasers
We study the decrease of the ground-state output with increasing current in two-state quantum dot
lasing. We show that the asymmetry in the thermal population redistribution breaks the symmetric
dynamical evolution of the electron-hole pairs. This fully explains the transition from two-state to
single-state lasing observed experimentally. The model also reproduces the temperature dependence
of the two-state lasin
Refractive Index Dynamics Of Quantum Dot Based Waveguide Electroabsorbers
The refractive index dynamics of InAs/GaAs quantum dot based waveguide absorbers is studied using heterodyne pump-probe measurements. Absorption reduction due to the pump can be accompanied by either positive or negative refractive index changes depending on the wavelength used. This change in sign of the phase amplitude coupling can be understood by considering the atomlike nature of the quantum dot transitions involved
Optical phase dynamics in mutually coupled diode laser systems exhibiting power synchronization
We probe the physical mechanism behind the known phenomenon of power
synchronization of two diode lasers that are mutually coupled via their delayed
optical fields. In a diode laser, the amplitude and the phase of the optical
field are coupled by the so-called linewidth enhancement factor, . In
this work, we explore the role of optical phases of the electric fields in
amplitude (and hence power) synchronization through in such mutually
delay-coupled diode laser systems. Our numerical results show that the
synchronization of optical phases drives the powers of lasers to synchronized
death regimes. We also find that as varies for different diode lasers,
the system goes through a sequence of in-phase amplitude-death states. Within
the windows between successive amplitude-death regions, the cross-correlation
between the field amplitudes exhibits a universal power-law behaviour with
respect to .Comment: J. Phys. B: At. Mol. Opt. Phys. 44 (2011
A Passively Mode-locked Nanosecond Laser with an Ultra-narrow Spectral Width
Many different mode-locking techniques have been realized in the past [1, 2], but mainly focused on increasing the spectral bandwidth to achieve ultra-short coherent light pulses with well below picosecond duration. In contrast, no mode-locked laser scheme has managed to generate Fourier-limited nanosecond long pulses, which feature narrow spectral bandwidths (~MHz regime) instrumental to applications in spectroscopy, efficient excitation of molecules, sensing, and quantum optics. The related limitations are mainly caused by the adverse operation timescales of saturable absorbers, as well as by the low strength of the nonlinear effects typically reachable through nanosecond pulses with manageable energies
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