66 research outputs found
Analysis of periodic metallic nano-slits for efficient interaction of terahertz and optical waves at nano-scale dimensions
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/98711/1/JApplPhys_109_084326.pd
Continuous-wave Cascaded-Harmonic Generation and Multi-Photon Raman Lasing in Lithium Niobate Whispering-Gallery Resonators
We report experimental demonstration of continuous-wave cascaded-harmonic
generation and Raman lasing in a millimeter-scale lithium niobate
whispering-gallery resonator pumped at a telecommunication-compatible infrared
wavelength. Intensity enhancement through multiple recirculations in the
whispering-gallery resonator and quasi phase-matching through a nonuniform
crystal poling enable simultaneous cascaded-harmonic generation up to the
fourth-harmonic accompanied by stimulated Raman, two-photon, three-photon, and
four-photon Raman scattering corresponding the molecular vibrational
wavenumbers 632 cm-1 and 255 cm-1 in z-cut lithium niobate at pump power levels
as low as 200mW. We demonstrate simultaneous cascaded-harmonic generation and
Raman lasing by observing the spectrum of the scattered light from the
resonator and by capturing the image of the decoupled light from the resonator
on a color CCD camera
Snapshot Multispectral Imaging Using a Diffractive Optical Network
Multispectral imaging has been used for numerous applications in e.g.,
environmental monitoring, aerospace, defense, and biomedicine. Here, we present
a diffractive optical network-based multispectral imaging system trained using
deep learning to create a virtual spectral filter array at the output image
field-of-view. This diffractive multispectral imager performs
spatially-coherent imaging over a large spectrum, and at the same time, routes
a pre-determined set of spectral channels onto an array of pixels at the output
plane, converting a monochrome focal plane array or image sensor into a
multispectral imaging device without any spectral filters or image recovery
algorithms. Furthermore, the spectral responsivity of this diffractive
multispectral imager is not sensitive to input polarization states. Through
numerical simulations, we present different diffractive network designs that
achieve snapshot multispectral imaging with 4, 9 and 16 unique spectral bands
within the visible spectrum, based on passive spatially-structured diffractive
surfaces, with a compact design that axially spans ~72 times the mean
wavelength of the spectral band of interest. Moreover, we experimentally
demonstrate a diffractive multispectral imager based on a 3D-printed
diffractive network that creates at its output image plane a
spatially-repeating virtual spectral filter array with 2x2=4 unique bands at
terahertz spectrum. Due to their compact form factor and computation-free,
power-efficient and polarization-insensitive forward operation, diffractive
multispectral imagers can be transformative for various imaging and sensing
applications and be used at different parts of the electromagnetic spectrum
where high-density and wide-area multispectral pixel arrays are not widely
available.Comment: 24 Pages, 9 Figure
Plasmonic photoconductive terahertz focal-plane array with pixel super-resolution
Imaging systems operating in the terahertz part of the electromagnetic
spectrum are in great demand because of the distinct characteristics of
terahertz waves in penetrating many optically-opaque materials and providing
unique spectral signatures of various chemicals. However, the use of terahertz
imagers in real-world applications has been limited by the slow speed, large
size, high cost, and complexity of the existing imaging systems. These
limitations are mainly imposed due to the lack of terahertz focal-plane arrays
(THz-FPAs) that can directly provide the frequency-resolved and/or
time-resolved spatial information of the imaged objects. Here, we report the
first THz-FPA that can directly provide the spatial amplitude and phase
distributions, along with the ultrafast temporal and spectral information of an
imaged object. It consists of a two-dimensional array of ~0.3 million plasmonic
photoconductive nanoantennas optimized to rapidly detect broadband terahertz
radiation with a high signal-to-noise ratio. As the first proof-of-concept, we
utilized the multispectral nature of the amplitude and phase data captured by
these plasmonic nanoantennas to realize pixel super-resolution imaging of
objects. We successfully imaged and super-resolved etched patterns in a silicon
substrate and reconstructed both the shape and depth of these structures with
an effective number of pixels that exceeds 1-kilo pixels. By eliminating the
need for raster scanning and spatial terahertz modulation, our THz-FPA offers
more than a 1000-fold increase in the imaging speed compared to the
state-of-the-art. Beyond this proof-of-concept super-resolution demonstration,
the unique capabilities enabled by our plasmonic photoconductive THz-FPA offer
transformative advances in a broad range of applications that use hyperspectral
and three-dimensional terahertz images of objects for a wide range of
applications.Comment: 62 page
Terahertz generation using plasmonic photoconductive gratings
A photoconductive terahertz emitter based on plasmonic contact electrode gratings is presented and experimentally demonstrated. The nanoscale grating enables ultrafast and high quantum efficiency operation simultaneously, by reducing the photo-generated carrier transport path to the photoconductor contact electrodes. The presented photoconductor eliminates the need for a short-carrier lifetime semiconductor, which limits the efficiency of conventional photoconductive terahertz emitters. Additionally, the photo-absorbing active area of the plasmonic photoconductive terahertz emitter can be increased without a significant increase in the capacitive loading to the terahertz radiating antenna, enabling high quantum-efficiency operation at high pump power levels by preventing the carrier screening effect and thermal breakdown. A plasmonic photoconductive terahertz emitter prototype based on the presented scheme is implemented and integrated with dipole antenna arrays on a semi-insulating In 0.53 Ga 0.47 As substrate. Emitted terahertz radiation is characterized in a terahertz time-domain spectroscopy setup, measuring a terahertz pulse width of 590 fs full-width at half maximum in response to 150 fs pump pulses at 925 nm.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/98624/1/1367-2630_14_10_105029.pd
- …