37,353 research outputs found
Arrangement for damping the resonance in a laser diode
An arrangement for damping the resonance in a laser diode is described. This arrangement includes an additional layer which together with the conventional laser diode form a structure (35) of a bipolar transistor. Therein, the additional layer serves as the collector, the cladding layer next to it as the base, and the active region and the other cladding layer as the emitter. A capacitor is connected across the base and the collector. It is chosen so that at any frequency above a certain selected frequency which is far below the resonance frequency the capacitor impedance is very low, effectively shorting the base to the collector
Diffraction coupled phase-locked semiconductor laser array
A new monolithic, diffraction coupled phase-locked semiconductor laser array has been fabricated. Stable narrow far-field patterns (~3°) and peak power levels of 1 W have been obtained for 100-µm-wide devices with threshold currents as low as 250 mA. Such devices may be useful in applications where high power levels and stable radiation patterns are needed
An Exceptional Sector for F-theory GUTs
D3-branes are often a necessary ingredient in global compactifications of
F-theory. In minimal realizations of flavor hierarchies in F-theory GUT models,
suitable fluxes are turned on, which in turn attract D3-branes to the Yukawa
points. Of particular importance are ``E-type'' Yukawa points, as they are
required to realize a large top quark mass. In this paper we study the
worldvolume theory of a D3-brane probing such an E-point. D3-brane probes of
isolated exceptional singularities lead to strongly coupled N = 2 CFTs of the
type found by Minahan and Nemeschansky. We show that the local data of an
E-point probe theory determines an N = 1 deformation of the original N = 2
theory which couples this strongly interacting CFT to a free hypermultiplet.
Monodromy in the seven-brane configuration translates to a novel class of
deformations of the CFT. We study how the probe theory couples to the Standard
Model, determining the most relevant F-term couplings, the effect of the probe
on the running of the Standard Model gauge couplings, as well as possible
sources of kinetic mixing with the Standard Model.Comment: v2: 32 pages, 1 figure, references added, appendix remove
Integral Constraints On cosmological Perturbations and their Energy
We show the relation between Traschen's integral equations and the energy,
and ``position of the centre of mass'', of the matter perturbations in a
Robertson-Walker spacetime. When the perturbations are ``localised'' we get a
set of integral constraints that includes hers. We illustrate them on a simple
example.Comment: 19 pages, Tex file, submitted to Classical and Quantum Gravit
Recent Developments In Monolithic Phase-Locked Semiconductor Laser Arrays
Coherent combination of the power of several semiconductor lasers fabricated on the same substrate has been the subject of an intense research effort in recent years, the main motivation being to obtain higher power levels than those available from a single laser in a stable radiation pattern. Best results reported so far include 2.6 Watts cw emitted power and less than 10 far-field angle (in the array plane) in arrays where all the lasers are electrically connected in parallel. A different type of coherent array, where each element has a separate contact, has been recently demonstrated. While requiring the more complex two-level metallization technology, applying a separate contact to each laser provides an additional degree of freedom in the design and the operation of monolithic arrays. The separate contacts can be employed to tailor the near-field and far-field distributions and to compensate for device-to-device nonuniformities. Furthermore, the control of the currents of the array elements allows the performance of a variety of other functions, such as beam scanning, spectral mode control, wavelength tuning and control of the mutual coherence between array elements
Controlled fundamental supermode operation of phase-locked arrays of gain-guided diode lasers
Uniform semiconductor laser arrays tend to oscillate in a superposition of their supermodes, thus leading to large beam divergence and spectral spread. Discrimination among the supermodes in phase-locked arrays is discussed theoretically. It is shown that supermode discrimination in gain-guided arrays, in favor of the fundamental supermode, is made possible by the near-field interference patterns which result from the complex optical fields of the gain-guided lasers. A fundamental supermode operation is demonstrated, for the first time, in GaAlAs/GaAs gain-guided laser arrays. This is achieved by control of the current (gain) profile across the array by means of individual laser contacts
Longitudinal-mode control in integrated semiconductor laser phased arrays by phase velocity matching
The spectrum of semiconductor laser arrays with separate contacts is investigated. It is demonstrated that the individual laser currents can be selected such that the array operates in a single longitudinal mode in contrast to the multimode nature of its individual constituents. Moreover, it is possible to tune the lasing frequency by varying the laser currents. Wavelength tuning range of ~50 Ã…, with tuning rate of ~5 Ã…/mA, is demonstrated. It is suggested that these spectral features, characteristic of lasers which are coupled in parallel, result from the strong frequency dependence of their spatial mode pattern near the phase-matching frequency of their coupled waveguides
Yet Another Model of Soft Gamma Repeaters
We develop a model of SGR in which a supernova leaves planets orbiting a
neutron star in intersecting eccentric orbits. These planets will collide in
years if their orbits are coplanar. Some fragments of debris lose
their angular momentum in the collision and fall onto the neutron star,
producing a SGR. The initial accretion of matter left by the collision with
essentially no angular momentum may produce a superburst like that of March 5,
1979, while debris fragments which later lose their angular momentum produce an
irregular pattern of smaller bursts.Comment: 16pp, Tex, WU-JIK-94-
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