913 research outputs found
Interplay between disorder and local field effects in photonic crystal waveguides
We introduce a theory to describe disorder-induced scattering in photonic
crystal waveguides, specifically addressing the influence of local field
effects and scattering within high-index-contrast perturbations. Local field
effects are shown to increase the predicted disorder-induced scattering loss
and result in significant resonance shifts of the waveguide mode. We
demonstrate that two types of frequency shifts can be expected, a mean
frequency shift and a RMS frequency shift, both acting in concert to blueshift
and broaden the nominal band structure. For a representative waveguide, we
predict substantial meV frequency shifts and band structure broadening for a
telecommunications operating frequency, even for state of the art fabrication.
The disorder-induced broadening is found to increase as the propagation
frequency approaches the slow light regime (mode edge) due to restructuring of
the electric field distribution. These findings have a dramatic impact on
high-index-contrast nanoscale waveguides, and, for photonic crystal waveguides,
suggest that the nominal slow-light mode edge may not even exist. Furthermore,
our results shed new light on why it has hitherto been impossible to observe
the very slow light regime for photonic crystal waveguides.Comment: 4 page lette
Coherent states, Path integral, and Semiclassical approximation
Using the generalized coherent states we argue that the path integral
formulae for and (in the discrete series) are WKB exact,if
the starting point is expressed as the trace of with
being given by a linear combination of generators. In our case,WKB
approximation is achieved by taking a large ``spin'' limit: . The result is obtained directly by knowing that the each coefficient
vanishes under the () expansion and is examined by another
method to be legitimated. We also point out that the discretized form of path
integral is indispensable, in other words, the continuum path integral
expression leads us to a wrong result. Therefore a great care must be taken
when some geometrical action would be adopted, even if it is so beautiful, as
the starting ingredient of path integral.Comment: latex 33 pages and 2 figures(uuencoded postscript file),
KYUSHU-HET-19 We have corrected the proof of the WKB-exactness in the section
A novel view of plane wave expansion method in photonic crystals
We propose a method derived from the simple plane wave expansion that can
easily solve the interface problem between vacuum and a semi-infinite photonic
crystal. The method is designed to find the complete set of all the
eigenfunctions, propagating or evanescent, of the translation operators , at a fixed frequency. With these eigenfunctions and their
eigenvalues, the transmitted and reflected waves can be determined. Two kinds
of applications are presented for 2D photonic crystals. The first is a
selection rule for determine the normal direction of the vacuum-photonic
crystal interface to achieve the highest attenuation effect at a gap frequency.
The second is to calculate the transmittance and reflectance for a light
incident from vacuum to an semi-infinite photonic crystal. As an example we
recalculate a system studied previously by K. Sakoda et al. and get results in
agreement with theirs
Final-state read-out of exciton qubits by observing resonantly excited photoluminescence in quantum dots
We report on a new approach to detect excitonic qubits in semiconductor
quantum dots by observing spontaneous emissions from the relevant qubit level.
The ground state of excitons is resonantly excited by picosecond optical
pulses. Emissions from the same state are temporally resolved with picosecond
time resolution. To capture weak emissions, we greatly suppress the elastic
scattering of excitation beams, by applying obliquely incident geometry to the
micro photoluminescence set-up. Rabi oscillations of the ground-state excitons
appear to be involved in the dependence of emission intensity on excitation
amplitude.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, to appear in Appl. Phys. Let
Photonic Crystal Nanobeam Cavity Strongly Coupled to the Feeding Waveguide
A deterministic design of an ultrahigh Q, wavelength scale mode volume
photonic crystal nanobeam cavity is proposed and experimentally demonstrated.
Using this approach, cavities with Q>10^6 and on-resonance transmission T>90%
are designed. The devices fabricated in Si and capped with low-index polymer,
have Q=80,000 and T=73%. This is, to the best of our knowledge, the highest
transmission measured in deterministically designed, wavelength scale high Q
cavities
Symmetry characterization of eigenstates in opal-based photonic crystals
The complete symmetry characterization of eigenstates in bare opal systems is
obtained by means of group theory. This symmetry assignment has allowed us to
identify several bands that cannot couple with an incident external plane wave.
Our prediction is supported by layer-KKR calculations, which are also
performed: the coupling coefficients between bulk modes and externally excited
field tend to zero when symmetry properties mismatch.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, submitted to Physical Review
Theory of disorder-induced multiple coherent scattering in photonic crystal waveguides
We introduce a theoretical formalism to describe disorder-induced extrinsic
scattering in slow-light photonic crystal waveguides. This work details and
extends the optical scattering theory used in a recent \emph{Physical Review
Letter} [M. Patterson \emph{et al.}, \emph{Phys. Rev. Lett.} \textbf{102},
103901 (2009)] to describe coherent scattering phenomena and successfully
explain complex experimental measurements. Our presented theory, that combines
Green function and coupled mode methods, allows one to self-consistently
account for arbitrary multiple scattering for the propagating electric field
and recover experimental features such as resonances near the band edge. The
technique is fully three-dimensional and can calculate the effects of disorder
on the propagating field over thousands of unit cells. As an application of
this theory, we explore various sample lengths and disordered instances, and
demonstrate the profound effect of multiple scattering in the waveguide
transmission. The spectra yield rich features associated with disorder-induced
localization and multiple scattering, which are shown to be exasperated in the
slow light propagation regime
Polarization switching and nonreciprocity in symmetric and asymmetric magnetophotonic multilayers with nonlinear defect
A one-dimensional magnetophotonic crystal with a nonlinear defect placed
either symmetrically or asymmetrically inside the structure is considered.
Simultaneous effects of time-reversal nonreciprocity and nonlinear spatial
asymmetry in the structure are studied. Bistable response is demonstrated in a
such system, accompanied by abrupt polarization switching between two circular
or elliptical polarizations for transmitted and reflected waves. The effect is
explained in terms of field localization at defect-mode spectral resonances and
can be used in the design of thin-film optical isolators and polarization
transformation devices.Comment: 20 pages, 8 figure
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